The child welfare system is broken, and no one seems to know how
to fix it. Except for the increasing number of scandals in the
news, the public knows little about the system, which is hidden
from public scrutiny, allegedly to protect children. Meanwhile, the
number of children being propelled into the welfare system is
increasing at an alarming rate, and more than 25 state child
welfare systems are being sued in federal court for abusive and
neglectful practices. A careful examination of the child welfare
system is long overdue. This book explores the sources of the
problems in the system, places those problems in their historical,
legal, and policy perspectives, and explores the implications of
policies for state and national levels.
The book opens with an overview of the child welfare system and
the problems inherent in it. Schwartz and Fishman then analyze
attempts to mend the system and review the Adoption Assistance and
Child Welfare Act--the foundation for contemporary child welfare
policy. The following chapters look at the practice of adoption,
the potential movement between child welfare and delinquency, and
the problems of residential care. The book concludes with the
implications of child welfare policy for the state and national
levels and recommends ways to reform the system.
General
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