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Excerpt a from DEADBEATS,DEADBROKES,AND PRISONERS,
by ANN CAMMETT - 18 Geo.J. PovertyLaw & Pol'y 127,129-31(2011)
The universal perception that all parents who fail to pay support are "deadbeat dads" remains a powerful cultural narrative and tough enforcement against parents that fail to pay is resonant with the body politic. This narrative driving child support enforcement has become progressively more punitive without allowing for meaningful political and policy discourse that distinguishes deadbeats frorn "deadbrokes" - those who simply don't have the ability to pay. Further, in the case of prisoners, state courts often conflate blame for criminal conduct with one's actual ability to earn money while incarcerated, using debt accumulation and obligation as a proxy for further punishment. Yet, debt accrued during incarceration does not typically represent a resource from which children will eventually benefit. A financial obligation on the books, unmoored to real earning capacity, may remain unpaid forever because it does not represent real income or future earnings. It is quite simply an uncollectible debt that does not benefit children, the state, or society.
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