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"We have not built in the kind of national support systems for families and children that other countries have," he said. Childhood poverty rates in the U.S. are also expected to climb -- 23.5 percent from 20 percent. Adema said the rise is a direct result of the financial crisis and higher unemployment rates. "The financial strain causes all sorts of other strain, so ultimately it might contribute to family dissolution," Adema said. "At the same time, it might bring some families together. I suspect that the response differs across families." The single parent phenomenon has been occurring over recent decades. The study noted the U.S. and England have higher teenage birthrates than other countries, partially contributing to the higher single-parent numbers, though the proportion of children born outside marriage was not significantly higher than the other countries. Christina Gibson Davis, a professor at Duke University's Sanford School of Public Police, said changing gender roles, the rise of contraception, high incarceration rates in some communities and an acceptance of having children out of wedlock have all contributed to the growing number. Terry O'Neill, president of the National Organization for Women, added it isn't being a single parent in itself that raises difficulties. "Single moms do a brilliant and amazing job raising their children," said Terry O'Neill, president of the National Organization for Women. "It is also true that single moms in this country are systemically underpaid, and systematically under-resourced and systemically unrespected. It's not the fact they are single moms that makes things difficult."
[Associated
Press;
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