Lidia Panico - INED- Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques (France National Institute for Demographic Studies)

The long-term effect of parental separation on childhood financial poverty and multidimensional deprivation: a lifecourse approach

    Date:  03/23/2017 (Thu)

    Time:  3:30pm- 5:00pm

    Location:  Seminar will be held on-site: Gross Hall 230E

    Organizer:  Giovanna Merli


Meeting Schedule: Login or email the organizer to schedule a meeting.

    All meetings will be held in the same location as the seminar unless otherwise noted.

   Wed 3/22/17 - Wed dinner with Giovanna Merli, Seth Sanders,

    8:30am - Breakfast

   10:00am - Maria M Laurito

   10:30am - OPEN

   11:00am - OPEN

   11:30am - Liz Ananat

   12:00pm - Lunch - Emma Zang, Maria Laurito

    1:30pm - Christina Gibson-Davis

    2:00pm - OPEN

    2:30pm - Angie O'Rand

    3:00pm - Seminar prep

    3:30pm - Seminar Presentation (3:30pm to 5:00pm)

    6:00pm - Dinner with Anna Gassman-Pines, Christina Gibson-Davis, Liz Ananat


    Additional Comments:  For children, parental separation is often accompanied by an increased risk of poverty and deteriorating living standards. These effects have been studied over relatively short periods of time, and not considering the multi-faceted context of childhood disadvantage. In this paper, we use the UK Millennium Cohort Study, a nationally representative cohort of over 18,000 children, to consider how parental separation affects the experience of childhood poverty and multi-domain deprivation from birth to age 11. Results highlight a large decrease in income after parental separation, and with only a partial recovery over the long term. However, the effects of parental separation on childhood deprivation were mixed. We note strong long-lasting effects of parental separation on deprivation from leisure activities such as holidays and after school activities; while effects on material deprivation are not long lasting. There are no effects on parenting involvement. This suggests that while facing strong financial constraints, parents reduce activities such as holidays and outings but attempt to limit changes in children’s material circumstances and their day-to-day parenting and routines. Maternal re-partnering is the most important post-separation recovery channel, more so than maternal work. The post-separation trajectories of children living with more and less educated mothers differ, suggesting that the pre-separation parental social and economic capital may play an important role.