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2022 Annual Conference

May 19–21, 2022

Sheraton Sand Key, Clearwater Beach, FL, US

Proposal authors can use this tool to see where they have been placed in the program agenda for an Oral or Poster Session.

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Confirm your place in the schedule by going to the ACCI Presenter Confirm Google Sheet and marking your session with the name and email address of the author who will be attending and presenting. Each presentation must have a separate paid registraint. Contact the ACCI Office immedicately by email at admin@consumerinterests.org to report a conflict or if you have questions. Please be sure to reference the session title(s), date(s), and time(s) if you contact us.

E3c When to Work and How Much: How Parenting Affects Employment Decisions of Divorced Mothers in Wisconsin

Friday, May 20, 2022 at 3:45 PM–5:15 PM EDT
Room 3
Key Words

female labor force participation, divorce, post divorce employment, parenting, time use

Short Description

Child support and the social safety net are seldom enough to compensate for mothers’ divorce-induced economic losses and parenting commitments tied to child placement arrangements* can lead to competing employment and parenting demands. This paper contributes to the extensive literature on divorce and women's work by studying mothers’ post-divorce employment and earnings, how parenting commitments (financial and otherwise) impact divorced mothers’ decision to work, and whether this differs by placement arrangements – an area less explored to date. Applying a mixed-methods approach to data from a large-scale survey of divorced parents in Wisconsin, USA, the paper quantitatively describes mothers’ post-divorce employment patterns, and uses qualitative data to illustrate how mothers in different placement arrangements manage competing financial and non-financial family obligations. Preliminary findings highlight constraints on divorced mothers’ time-use and earnings that differ by placement categories and are relevant for supplementary income and work participation policies.*Placement arrangements refer to the different ways of dividing the number of nights a child spends with each parent after divorce, as opposed to custody which determines the legal right of a guardian to make decisions for the child after divorce. 

Submitter

Trisha Chanda, University of Wisconsin Madison

Authors

Trisha Chanda, University of Wisconsin - Madison
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