The Link Between Male Employment and Child Maltreatment in the U.S., 2000-2012.

Journal Name
Children and Youth Services Review
Journal Volume
66
Page Count
0
Year Published
2016
Author (Individual)
Cherry, Robert.
Wang, Chun.
Resource Type
Journal Article
Resource Format
Unbound
Resource Language
English
Child maltreatment rates are strongly linked to adult male behavior, suggesting that labor market conditions, by influencing male behaviors, can influence maltreatment rates. Using the unemployment rate as the sole measure of labor market conditions, past studies generally conclude that employment conditions do not systematically influence child maltreatment rates. By contrast, this study found that state-level child maltreatment rates were statistically significant and inversely related to the state-level employment rates of men, aged 20 to 34 yrs old. It also found that the interaction of child poverty and living in a single-parent household is positively related to child maltreatment rates. Policies to reduce employment problems are discussed. (Author abstract)

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