A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Single Mothers and Child Support in Extended-Family Households: Insights from Six Latin American Countries




AuthorsGuarin, Angela; Mesiaislehto, Merita; Hakovirta, Mia; Costanzo, Molly

PublisherOXFORD UNIV PRESS

Publishing placeOXFORD

Publication year2025

JournalSocial Politics

Journal name in sourceSOCIAL POLITICS

Journal acronymSOC POLIT

Number of pages29

ISSN1072-4745

eISSN1468-2893

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxaf011

Web address https://doi.org/10.1093/sp/jxaf011


Abstract
Extended-family households are common among single mothers. Using Luxembourg Income Study data from waves 2014-2019, we study child support receipt among single mothers living in extended-family households in Chile, Guatemala, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay. We have three aims: to present the prevalence and characteristics of single mothers living with relatives, compare the level of child support received by extended-family and other single-mother households, and examine whether living in an extended-family household predicts child support receipt. We find the characteristics of mothers in extended-family households vary by country. Overall, these mothers are younger, have lower levels of education, are less likely to be employed, and are, in half of the countries, less likely to receive child support. This has important gender implications, as cultural norms around caregiving often place the financial burden on women, while fathers may reduce their financial contributions when mothers live with other relatives.


Funding information in the publication
The authors received funding from the School of Government and the Office of the Vice-President of Research and Knowledge Creation at the Universidad de los Andes in support of this research.


Last updated on 2025-16-05 at 14:35