Browse the Collection
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Current Filters: Author:Adams, Gina [remove]; New in five years [remove]; Classification:Subsidies [remove];
27 results found.|
Select Citation
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Result | Resource Type |
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Child care and welfare reform An overview the evolution of federal child care subsidy policy since 1996, a discussion of the use of subsidized child care among low-income populations, and an identification of possible themes in the debate over the reauthorization of federal funds for the subsidy, expansion, and improvement of child care and early education services |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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Child care centers, child care subsidies, and faith-based organizations: Preliminary findings on five counties in 2003 Preliminary findings about the role of faith-based organizations in child care provision, and their rates of participation in the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) voucher subsidy system |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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Child care centers, child care vouchers, and faith-based organizations An examination of the roles of faith-based organization in providing or supporting center-based child care, particularly for children from families receiving vouchers, in five counties in four states |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care instability: Definitions, context, and policy implications An examination of child care instability, including its definition and characteristics, causes, relationship to child care subsidies, and policy implications |
Other |
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Child care instability: Definitions, context, and policy implications [Executive summary] A summary of an examination of child care instability, including its definition and characteristics, causes, relationship to child care subsidies, and policy implications |
Executive Summary |
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Child care subsidies and leaving welfare: Policy issues and strategies The second part of a three-part study of the interaction between state and local welfare-to-work programs and child care assistance programs, focusing on child care subsidy use by parents in transition from TANF to employment |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care subsidies and TANF: A synthesis of three studies on systems, policies, and parents A summary of findings from a three-part study of the interaction between state and local welfare-to-work programs and child care assistance programs, focusing on administrative structures, protocols and interagency coordination as they affect administrators and TANF parents, child care subsidy use by parents in transition to work, and the experiences of current and former TANF recipients with the subsidy system |
Other |
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Child care subsidies for TANF families: The nexus of systems and policies First of a three-part study of the interaction between state and local welfare-to-work programs and child care assistance programs, focusing on administrative structures, protocols and interagency coordination as they affect TANF parents |
Reports & Papers |
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Child care subsidies for TANF families: The nexus of systems and policies [Executive Summary] Summary of the first of a three-part study of the interaction between state and local welfare-to-work programs and child care assistance programs, focusing on administrative structures, protocols and interagency coordination as they affect TANF parents |
Executive Summary |
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Child care subsidy policies and practices: Implications for child care providers A study of subsidy policies and practices that can shape the experiences of providers serving subsidized children, especially the way providers’ pay and their ability to navigate the subsidy system affect their participation in the system, the quality of child care, and their financial stability; based on interviews and site visits in 17 sites |
Other |
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Child care vouchers and unregulated family, friend, and neighbor care A study of providers of unregulated family, friend, and neighbor care who participate in the voucher system of subsidized care to determine their characteristics and their perceptions of policy, and a study of the voucher agencies’ experiences with family, friend, and neighbor caregivers, among samples of caregivers and voucher agency staff in five counties from four states |
Reports & Papers |
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Client-friendly strategies: What can CCDF learn from research on other systems? An examination of the implications for efforts to improve child care subsidy access and retention of research on strategies to make benefits systems more "client friendly" |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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Designing subsidy systems to meet the needs of families: An overview of policy research findings A synthesis of strategies used by state and local agencies to support parents through the process of accessing and retaining child care subsidies |
Other |
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Designing subsidy systems to meet the needs of families: An overview of policy research findings [Executive summary] A summary of a synthesis of strategies used by state and local agencies to support parents through the process of accessing and retaining child care subsidies |
Executive Summary |
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Essential but Often Ignored: Child Care Providers and the Subsidy System An examination of the characteristics of subsidized and unsubsidized providers, exploring how subsidy policies affect their experiences. The study also describes the participation of faith-based organizations in the child care subsidy system and the occurrence of activities supporting children's early learning and literacy in diverse settings. |
Administration for Children and Families/OPRE Projects
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Essential but often ignored: Child care providers in the subsidy system An analysis of subsidy policies and practices that affect providers serving subsidized families, focusing on the amount providers are paid to care for subsidized children and how providers experience the subsidy system |
Reports & Papers |
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Getting and retaining child care assistance: How policy and practice influence parents experiences A study of parents' interaction with the child care subsidy system and how state and local subsidy policies and practices affect parents' experiences. Particular attention is paid to the process of applying for and retaining subsidies. |
Reports & Papers |
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Is there a system supporting low-income working families? An investigation of the efficiency of the Medicaid and State Child Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), food stamps, child care subsidies, and the earned income tax credit (EITC) programs in supporting low-income, working families |
Reports & Papers |
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Locked doors: States struggling to meet the child care needs of low-income working families A study on the demand for affordable quality childcare in the United States |
Reports & Papers
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More than a work support?: Issues around integrating child development goals into the child care subsidy system A description of issues involved in using the child care subsidy system to support child development |
Other |
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Navigating the child care subsidy system: Policies and practices that affect access and retention A brief that summarizes the results of a study of child care subsidy policies and practices that can affect parents' interaction with the subsidy agency, the subsidy application process, and subsidy retention. |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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Preliminary findings on the adequacy of child care funding from the child care case studies of the Assessing the New Federalism (ANF) Project An inquiry into factors affecting the utilization of child care subsidies, based on interviews of and focus groups with parents, administrators, and policymakers at 17 sites in 12 states |
Reports & Papers
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Strategies to support child care subsidy access and retention: Ideas from seven midwestern states An overview of the child care subsidy policies and strategies in place in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin in 2005, focusing on access to and retention of subsidies |
Reports & Papers |
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Strategies to support child care subsidy access and retention: Ideas from seven midwestern states [Executive summary] A summary of an overview of the child care subsidy policies and strategies in place in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin in 2005, focusing on access to and retention of subsidies |
Executive Summary |
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Supporting child care subsidy access and retention: Strategies from seven midwestern states A summary of the child care subsidy policies and strategies in place in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin in 2005, focusing on access to and retention of subsidies |
Fact Sheets & Briefs |
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Peer Reviewed Journal