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Divorced dads often contend that the largest factor
precluding them from playing a significant, positive role in
their children's lives is not willful neglect but instead
that that they are often prevented from being involved with
their kids. A large body of published research supports this
contention, and a new study of children of divorce may help
lay to rest the myth of the uncaring divorced dad.
According to this new research, adjusting for income and
standard of living, divorced fathers who have been able to
remain a part of their children's lives because they have
joint custody voluntarily contribute even more to their
children's college education than the children's mothers do.
In an article recently published in Family Court Review,
Arizona State University researchers William Fabricius,
Sanford Braver and Kindra Deneau called legal custody
arrangements (joint vs. sole maternal) a "dramatic" and
largely causal factor in projecting voluntary financial
support.
The researchers noted that "fathers' contributions steadily
increased with the amount of access they had to their
children" and that custodial mothers' willingness to allow
divorced dads to remain a part of their children's lives
during their childhoods plays a crucial role in determining
how much voluntary college assistance fathers will provide.
Earlier research by Braver found that divorced dads who have
jobs and who can see their kids rarely skip out on their
child support obligations, and that "parental
disenfranchisement"--fathers' feelings that they have been
stripped of the right to act as true parents to their
children--has a large and harmful effect on child support
compliance.
Braver's research simply reflects common sense--parents are
far more willing to work and sacrifice to support children
whom they can love and be loved by than they are for kids
whom they cannot see. However, family courts have been blind
to the obvious, and while a massive enforcement bureaucracy
pursues divorced dads for child support, courts do little to
enforce these fathers' access to their children. According
to the Children's Rights Council, a Washington-based
advocacy group, more than five million children each year
have their access to their noncustodial parents interfered
with or blocked by custodial parents.
This new research powerfully suggests the need for
egalitarian divorce measures such as the presumption of
joint legal and physical custody of children after a divorce
and the enforcement of visitation orders. Children need the
love, strength and guidance that fathers give. They also
need their financial support. Reforms that allow divorced
dads to remain a meaningful part of their children's lives
will supply both.
This column first appeared in the
Newsday
(6/23/03).
Glenn Sacks is a men's and fathers' issues columnist and
radio talk show host. His columns have appeared in dozens of
America's largest newspapers. His radio show,
His Side with Glenn Sacks,
can be heard every Sunday on KRLA 870 AM in Los Angeles. Glenn
can be reached via his website,
at
www.GlennSacks.com
or by e-mail at Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
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