The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency. / Fallesen, Peter.

2013. Paper præsenteret ved Population Association of America Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, USA.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Fallesen, P 2013, 'The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency', Paper fremlagt ved Population Association of America Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, USA, 11/04/2013 - 13/04/2013.

APA

Fallesen, P. (2013). The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency. Paper præsenteret ved Population Association of America Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, USA.

Vancouver

Fallesen P. The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency. 2013. Paper præsenteret ved Population Association of America Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, USA.

Author

Fallesen, Peter. / The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency. Paper præsenteret ved Population Association of America Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, USA.

Bibtex

@conference{a71592d71fde4ae8b5be66f5bde0d8e4,
title = "The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency",
abstract = "The arrival of a child profoundly alters the life-course for men. Yet, children could change men's lives not only by arriving in them, but also by departing from them. In this article, I test how one such departure-foster care placement-affects men's labor market attachment, and in so doing I provide a novel parallel to existing research on how fatherhood affects men, which focuses almost exclusively on a child's arrival. Using population panel data from Denmark that include all first time fathers whose children were placed in foster care from 1995-2005, I find that having a child placed in foster care is associated with up to a 12 percentage point increase in welfare dependency. This result persists in analyses that control for individual and family level fixed effects, unobserved heterogeneity, and selection into having a child placed in foster care.",
author = "Peter Fallesen",
year = "2013",
language = "English",
note = "Population Association of America Annual Meeting, PAA ; Conference date: 11-04-2013 Through 13-04-2013",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - The effect of foster care placement on paternal welfare dependency

AU - Fallesen, Peter

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - The arrival of a child profoundly alters the life-course for men. Yet, children could change men's lives not only by arriving in them, but also by departing from them. In this article, I test how one such departure-foster care placement-affects men's labor market attachment, and in so doing I provide a novel parallel to existing research on how fatherhood affects men, which focuses almost exclusively on a child's arrival. Using population panel data from Denmark that include all first time fathers whose children were placed in foster care from 1995-2005, I find that having a child placed in foster care is associated with up to a 12 percentage point increase in welfare dependency. This result persists in analyses that control for individual and family level fixed effects, unobserved heterogeneity, and selection into having a child placed in foster care.

AB - The arrival of a child profoundly alters the life-course for men. Yet, children could change men's lives not only by arriving in them, but also by departing from them. In this article, I test how one such departure-foster care placement-affects men's labor market attachment, and in so doing I provide a novel parallel to existing research on how fatherhood affects men, which focuses almost exclusively on a child's arrival. Using population panel data from Denmark that include all first time fathers whose children were placed in foster care from 1995-2005, I find that having a child placed in foster care is associated with up to a 12 percentage point increase in welfare dependency. This result persists in analyses that control for individual and family level fixed effects, unobserved heterogeneity, and selection into having a child placed in foster care.

M3 - Paper

T2 - Population Association of America Annual Meeting

Y2 - 11 April 2013 through 13 April 2013

ER -

ID: 119578607