of Family Economic Issues, Volume 32, pp.27-35 Google Scholar Cross Ref (2011): Financial management practices of couples with great marriages. In A Warde & D Southerton (eds), The habits of consumption. Shove, E.: (2012) Habits and their creatures.Journal of Economic Psychology, Volume 16, pp.361-376. (1995): His money, her money: recent research on financial organisation in marriage. of Family and Economic Issues, Volume 22, pp.353-372. An in-depth look at family cashflow management practices. In Proc: CHI 2014, ACM Press Google Scholar Digital Library (2014): Money talks: Tracking personal finances. Kaye, J., McCuistion, M., Gulotta, R., Dhamma, D.(2010): The design of eco-feedback technology. Froehlich, J., Findlater, L and Landay, J.Theory & Psychology, Volume 14(2): pp.167-189 20 Google Scholar Cross Ref (2004) On Discourse and Dirty Nappies Gender, the Division of Household Labour and the Social Psychology of Distributive Justice. Debt and marital satisfaction change in recently married couples. H., Fitzpatrick, G., Dourish, P., Schmidt, K. Proceedings of the 8th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work, 2003. (2003): Informing the Development of Calendar Systems for Domestic Use. Crabtree, A., Hemmings, T., Rodden, T.(2006): All my worldly goods I share with you? Managing money at the transition to heterosexual marriage. B., Clarke, V., Reibstein, J., Edmunds, A. Proceedings of the 13th European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work, 2013. (2013): Calendars: Time coordination and overview in families and beyond.
Australian Government (2015b) Low income supplement.Australian Government (2015a) Medicare low income threshold for families.of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, 37 (2), pp. B (2008): Separate financial entities?: Beyond categories of money management. Design propositions are made towards a Family Holiday Expense Tracker and family-situated bill payment reminder, both of which aim to encourage whole-of-family collaboration around money management and better including children in what is, at-present, an activity they are largely excluded from. This paper presents ideas for fostering collaboration around family finances. Participating families reflected upon the creative and often low-tech systems they used to manage their finances and ideas they had for "ideal" technologies that would better help them organise their money. Based on a process of in-situ qualitative interviews, we find that money management is often a collaborative process in the family and occurs in a similar way to other household tasks as part of existing divisions of domestic labour. This paper looks specifically at the ways that families organise and manage their finances. Despite this, the practice is not yet a strong focus for HCI work in the home. Managing finances is a practice carried out daily in homes across the world.