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- Title
The gendered framing of Australia’s child support reforms.
- Authors
Cook, Kay; Natalier, Kristin
- Abstract
In Australia, as in other jurisdictions, child support has become a political hot topic, and one with the potential to deepen and challenge socio-legal understandings of masculinity, autonomy, and the legal construction of the ‘father figure’. However, to date sociological work on child support reform in Australia has focused on describing manifest outcomes, with far less emphasis on analysing the latent framing of child support as a policy issue. In this article we applied Bacchi’s (1999) concept of framing to Gale’s (1999) concept of policy trajectory analysis to analyse the connections and disconnections between recommendations made in the child support section of the 2003 Inquiry into Child Custody, the subsequent 2005 Ministerial Taskforce on Child Support report responding to those recommendations, and the resultant 2006–2008 legislative child support amendments. The framing of child support reflected more than a response to men’s rights activists’ claims that the previous child support scheme asked men to pay too much and was not fair. It reinforced the socio-legal construction of men as autonomous and financially and emotionally self-reliant subjects who control their lives and finances. Child support is represented as less a financial question and more a question of masculinity and identity in changing family structures and relations.
- Subjects
AUSTRALIA; CHILD support laws; LAW reform; AUTONOMY (Psychology); FATHERHOOD -- Social aspects; MEN'S movement; FATHER-child relationship; MASCULINITY &; society; LEGAL status of men
- Publication
International Journal of Law, Policy & the Family, 2013, Vol 27, Issue 1, p28
- ISSN
1360-9939
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/lawfam/ebs013