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Report 12. SEP 2014
  • Labour Market
  • The Social Sector
  • Children, Adolescents and Families
  • Labour Market, The Social Sector, Children, Adolescents and Families

Children of divorced parents with ethnic minority background

Authors:

  • Mai Heide Ottosen
  • Anika Liversage
  • Rikke Fuglsang Olsen
  • Labour Market
  • The Social Sector
  • Children, Adolescents and Families
  • Labour Market, The Social Sector, Children, Adolescents and Families
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The number of divorces in ethnic minority families has risen in recent years. Children with an ethnic minority background see their parents split up almost as often as their Danish peers. However, children with an ethnic minority background encounter special challenges. This is shown in this survey focusing on families from non-Western countries. The families are often characterised by dramatic divorces and this makes subsequent parent cooperation difficult. Compared with Danish children of divorced parents, these children generally have less time with their father and they more often live with their mother. More than half these children grow up in poverty (OECD poverty line). Furthermore, far more of these children than Danish-ethnic children have mothers outside the labour market who are receiving social cash benefits or early retirement pensions. This survey indicates that some form of divorce culture is missing in ethnic environments, since the parents are often rooted in a society not traditionally prone to divorce. This means it can be difficult to shape a role as a divorced parent: What should you say to the children? How do you arrange a custody scheme which works well for the children? How do you cooperate as divorced parents? The results of the report are based on qualitative interviews with more than 80 children, parents and specialists as well as quantitative data. This survey was financed with support from the Egmont Foundation and was carried out in cooperation with the children's organisation Børns Vilkår.

Authors

  • Mai Heide OttosenAnika LiversageRikke Fuglsang Olsen

About this publication

  • Publisher

    SFI - Det Nationale Forskningscenter for Velfærd
VIVE – The Danish Centre for Social Science Research provides knowledge that contributes to developing the welfare society and strengthening quality development, efficiency enhancement and governance in the public sector, both in municipalities, regions and nationally.
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E-mail: vive@vive.dk
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