TITLE: Perceptions of Procedural Justice and Their Impact on Child Support Compliance Among Noncustodial Parents Introduction to the Problem Background of the Study

 TITLE: Perceptions of Procedural Justice and Their Impact on Child Support Compliance Among Noncustodial Parents

  • Introduction to the Problem
  • Background of the Study
  • Statement of the Problem
  • Significance of the Study

The Week 1 discussion prompt asks you to identify an issue or problem in criminal justice that is worth researching(TOPIC IS THE TITLE ABOVE) , discuss its negative impact, demonstrate the need for a study, and explain who would benefit from the findings. Please answer the bullets above using supportive information below IN NARRATIVE PARRAGRAPHS.. This is a doctoral level course. 

Background Info 

 Child support enforcement agencies rely on legal authority and coercive mechanisms (wage withholding, license suspension, contempt proceedings) to ensure compliance. While these tools are legally justified, compliance remains inconsistent, particularly among noncustodial parents who perceive the system as punitive, biased, or unresponsive.

Research in criminal justice demonstrates that procedural justice—perceptions of fairness, respect, neutrality, and voice—significantly influences compliance and cooperation, even when outcomes are unfavorable. However, procedural justice has been under-examined in child support enforcement, despite its parallels to probation, courts, and corrections.

At the Cuyahoga County Office of Child Support, understanding how noncustodial parents perceive interactions with caseworkers, hearings, and enforcement actions could provide actionable insight into improving voluntary compliance, reducing enforcement escalation, and strengthening legitimacy

Current Problem:  

Despite the availability of multiple enforcement mechanisms, child support compliance rates remain inconsistent, suggesting that legal authority alone may be insufficient to ensure cooperation. There is limited applied research examining how noncustodial parents’ perceptions of procedural justice during child support enforcement processes influence their willingness to comply with support obligations. Without this understanding, agencies risk relying on punitive strategies that may undermine legitimacy, increase resistance, and perpetuate noncompliance.

Current Purpose:

 The purpose of this applied doctoral project is to examine how perceptions of procedural justice—including fairness, respect, neutrality, and opportunity for voice—during child support enforcement interactions influence noncustodial parents’ cooperation and compliance with child support orders within a county child support agency.