Abstract

Women experiencing poverty are more likely to face intimate partner violence (IPV), poor health, and stigma. IPV survivors are overrepresented among those who receive Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), a conditional cash program serving families experiencing poverty. More generous TANF policies may be protective against IPV, but a greater insight into TANF’s effect could be gleaned through a contemporaneous study that examines intersecting determinants of wellbeing and engages community interpretation of findings. Using an adapted Family Stress Model framework and analyzing data through an intersectional and community-based lens, we explore the impact of TANF on women’s wellbeing through in-depth, semi-structured interviews during the COVID-19 pandemic with 13 women who had TANF experience in three U.S. states. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis in MAXQDA and researchers facilitated three member-checking events to enhance validity of result interpretation. Four themes emerged: (1) Low cash and conditional benefits provided limited short-term “relief” but contributed to poverty and hard choices; (2) TANF benefit levels and conditions increased women’s dependence on others, straining relationships; (3) Women undertook extraordinary measures to access TANF, largely to fulfill their roles as mothers; and (4) TANF stigma creates psychological stress, differentially experienced by African Americans. Increasing TANF cash benefits and other cash transfers for those experiencing poverty, adopting solely state funded TANF programs, increasing funding for TANF administration, addressing TANF stigma and racialized narratives, and allowing optional child support participation or a larger “pass-through” of child support are important steps toward making TANF more protective against IPV.

Highlights

  • Women who experience poverty and its related stressors are more likely to experience relationships of a poorer quality, sometimes involving intimate partner violence (IPV) [1,2].Satisfying or positive relationships can improve health [3]; IPV, or “physical violence, sexual violence, stalking and psychological aggression by a current or former intimate partner” [4], may sustain, or deepen, individual poverty [5], due to its associations with depression, physical injury, and post-traumatic stress disorder [6,7]

  • Women indicated that Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) cash benefits provided immediate but short-term relief from psychological stress and economic pressure, but that poverty, hard choices, and challenging interpersonal relationships persisted because of low levels of cash assistance, stigma, and conditions associated with TANF

  • Increasing the amount of cash transfers to individuals experiencing poverty, creating solely state funded TANF programs to expand access to those who are experiencing barriers to employment, actively seeking to reduce stigma and racialized narratives associated with TANF receipt, and allowing women to opt-in to participation in TANF child support requirements and/or receive greater child support pass-throughs are important first steps toward making TANF more beneficial and accessible to all participants, but especially stigmatized groups including IPV survivors

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Summary

Introduction

Women who experience poverty and its related stressors are more likely to experience relationships of a poorer quality, sometimes involving intimate partner violence (IPV) [1,2]. Satisfying or positive relationships can improve health [3]; IPV, or “physical violence, sexual violence, stalking and psychological aggression (including coercive tactics) by a current or former intimate partner” [4], may sustain, or deepen, individual poverty [5], due to its associations with depression, physical injury, and post-traumatic stress disorder [6,7]. Abusers perpetuate survivors’ experience of poverty by, for example, interfering with employment, controlling a survivors’ resources, or obtaining debt in the survivors’ name [8].

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