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2013 Conference

April 10–12, 2013

The Benson Hotel, Portland, Oregon

This section lists poster sessions as well as concurrent sessions by day, time, and room. Concurrent sessions have multiple presentations. You may search by title, author names, or keyword. A Schedule-at-a-Glance is posted on the Website and will provide the overview. This is the detail.

Social Security Survivors Benefits: Exploring the Effects of Reproductive Pathways and State Intestacy Laws on Attitudes Regarding Benefit Eligibility and Awards

Thursday, April 11, 2013 at 9:45 AM–11:00 AM PDT
Windsor Room (Breakout Session D)
Major Area of Focus
Financial Services
Other
If you selected "Other," please describe in 250 characters or fewer

Social Security survivors benefits

Secondary area of focus

Financial Services

Short Abstract

Most minor children are eligible for Social Security survivors benefits if a wage-earning parent dies, but eligibility of children not in utero at the time of death is more nuanced. The purpose of this study was to examine attitudes concerning access to Social Security survivors benefits in the context of posthumous reproduction. A probability sample of 540 Florida households responded to a multiple-segment factorial vignette designed to examine the effects of state intestacy laws and five reproductive pathways—normative, posthumous birth, cryopreserved embryo, cryopreserved gametes, and posthumous gamete retrieval—on attitudes toward eligibility for the Social Security survivors benefits. Broad support was found for the survivors benefits following normative and posthumous birth pathways, but attitudes were decidedly less favorable when the child was not in utero at the time of parental death. In addition, in stark contrast to the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision in Astrue v. Capato, the vast majority of respondents did not believe state intestacy laws should determine eligibility for Social Security survivors benefits.

Corresponding Author

[photo]
Martie Gillen, Ph.D., MBA, University of Florida
Job Title

Assistant Professor

City & State (or Province & Country)

Gainesville, FL

Additional Authors

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Jason D. Hans, Ph.D., University of Kentucky
Job Title

Associate Professor

City & State (or Province & Country)

Lexington, KY

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