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Through careful ethnography and rich in-depth interviews at a
non-profit foster family agency, this book takes a look behind the
scenes of our troubled foster care system.
Through careful ethnography and rich in-depth interviews at a
non-profit foster family agency, Parenting for the State looks
behind the scenes of the troubled US foster care system, and the
motivations, struggles and frustrations of the social workers and
foster parents who spend their days caring for vulnerable children.
child advocates as a national travesty, Teresa Toguchi Swartz
delves deep to understand why the number of children under state
protection has grown over the past two decades, and why the foster
care system has been charged with overzealously removing children
from their families and placing them in unstable, insecure and
unsafe environments which put them at greater risk for
homelessness, imprisonment and state dependency in later life. and
the foster parents, Teresa Toguchi Swartz uncovers what contributes
to these disheartening outcomes for children and discusses the
problems of the system, and the competing cultural rationales and
complex bureaucratic environment that set the context under which
care is administered. women's studies, as well as sociologists and
child welfare advocates will find this an invaluable addition to
their studies
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