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Housing insecurity among urban fathers

Curtis, Marah A.; Geller, Amanda B.

This article examines housing insecurity among an understudied population: urban fathers of young children. Housing security is of particular importance for vulnerable populations, and urban fathers, many of whom face unemployment and monitoring from the child support and criminal justice systems, often rely on this security to mitigate the socioeconomic challenges they face. By assessing the extent and type of housing insecurity affecting urban fathers, we identify a potentially serious source of disadvantage facing families more broadly. A year after the birth of a new child, fully a quarter of fathers reported significant housing insecurities with 3% experiencing homelessness. Results suggest that from 9-12% of fathers are doubling up, relying on others for living expenses, and moving more than once every year. Finally, only half of fathers had been able to maintain housing security over the three to four years since the focal child's birth.

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More About This Work

Academic Units
Columbia Population Research Center
Publisher
Columbia Population Research Center
Series
Columbia Population Research Center Working Papers, 10-08
Published Here
February 28, 2011

Notes

August 2010.