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Child Support Conviction and Recidivism: A Statistical Interaction Pattern by Race
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Child Support Conviction and Recidivism: A Statistical Interaction Pattern by Race

Solveig Spjeldnes, Hide Yamatani and Maggie McGowan Davis
Journal of evidence-informed social work, Vol.12(6), pp.628-636
01/01/2015
PMID: 25946466
Web of Science ID: WOS:000374321700008

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Abstract

An estimated 50,000 parents are behind bars on average daily for child support nonpayment, but information about these fathers and their recidivism rates are lacking. Using a jail sample (N = 16,382), multinomial logistics regression method was utilized; subgroup analysis was used to investigate differential beta weights of predictor variables. Informed by Critical Race Theory, findings showed that fathers incarcerated for arrears had significantly higher rates of recidivism than other jailed men, but had an interaction effect with race. After controlling for age, education, and prior attendance at 12-step meetings, Black fathers but NOT White fathers showed significant post-release recidivism. Implications are discussed.

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