The Vanishing Family received numerous awards and widespread acclaim from newspaper columnists. Its influence led Sen. Bill Bradley (D–NJ) to introduce the Bradley Amendment, which since its passage in 1986 has enforced the provision of child support.
At a time when The Cosby Show was the most watched show on television, The Vanishing Family presented a radically different image of Black American families to the American public. The special was immediately controversial and received numerous awards.
The Christian Science Monitor described The Vanishing Family as "a hard-hitting news special" on "the current state of the black family in America."[1]The New York Times noted that the special had "no negative racial stereotypes" and praised it as using "intelligence and grace" to describe its subjects.[2]
Angela Davis wrote an essay criticizing The Vanishing Family, arguing that there was a flaw in the statistic that impelled the report. In Women, Culture & Politics, she attributed the percentage of black children born to single mothers to the low, and declining, number of married black women having children.[4][page needed]
Legacy
Authors Kathryn Edin and Timothy J. Nelson credit The Vanishing Family with the introduction of the Bradley Amendment, a legislative amendment that prohibits retroactive reduction of child support obligations.[5]
^Edin, Kathryn; Nelson, Timothy J. (2013). Doing the Best I Can: Fatherhood in the Inner City. University of California Press. pp. 2–3. ISBN9780520274068.
^Ehrlich, Robert L. (11 October 2014). "A Permanent Family Crisis". National Review. Retrieved 21 February 2021.