The study provides a telling look at fatherhood among black, Latino and white men. The CDC found that a higher percentage of black fathers living with young children (up to age five) did daily activities like sharing meals, dressing their children, and reading to them than other fathers. Across the board, black dads did just as much as white and Latino dads, whether they live with or apart from their children.
It should be noted that that’s often the statistic that gets thrown around when we talk about the crisis of black fatherhood—that more black men live apart from their families than other fathers. That’s true, but as ThinkProgress notes, there’s evidence that suggests that number “stems from structural systems of inequality and poverty.”
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