A jumble of standards: How state and federal authorities have underestimated child maltreatment fatalities
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
2w ago
This blog was originally prepared as a report for the project, Lives Cut Short: Children Who Have Died of Abuse and Neglect in the United States Since 2022, which is sponsored by the American Enterprise Institute and the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill. A PDF version appears on the project website. The annual Child Maltreatment reports, produced by the Children’s Bureau of the U.S. Administration for Children and Families, are based on data that states submit to the National Child Abuse and Neglect (NCANDS) data system. These reports are eagerly anticipated in the child welf ..read more
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Lives cut short: a new project to document child maltreatment fatalities
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
2w ago
ABC News: Joanna, Terri and Sierra Denton-Carrillo On May 2, 2024, an extraordinary gathering was held in Washington, DC. It brought together scholars, advocates, and family members of children who lost their lives to abuse and neglect to mark the inauguration of a new project, Lives Cut Short. This project, under the auspices of the American Enterprise Institute and University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, will shed a light on the lives and deaths of abused and neglected children, many of which would never otherwise be known to the public. I am proud to be a part of this project, along with ..read more
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Controlling the narrative: How the state of Washington is trying to censor the foster parent voice in court
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
1M ago
by Christina Faucett I am honored to publish this essay from Christina Faucett. Christina has been a licensed foster parent in the state of Washington for six years and has adopted one child from the foster care system. Prior to becoming a foster parent, she was a CASA for three years. She is currently a member of the DCYF Parental Advisory Group and is passionate about fixing what is broken in our child welfare system to keep Washington kids safe. She lives in the Seattle area with her husband and daughter. You can follow her on X at @DCYFWAtch. In 2023, the Washington State Department of Ch ..read more
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Flying blind: the strange story of a strategy, an ideology, and an evaluation
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
1M ago
By Marie K. Cohen As readers digest the report that follows, the content may cause significant discomfort stemming from painful, lived personal experiences and perspectives shaped by social constructs made implicit through centuries of white supremacy and structural oppression. Readers are invited to practice self-care while navigating this content and to consider reading the findings with a group to engage in collective reflection. Tyrone Howard et al, Beyond Blind Removal: Color Consciousness and Anti-Racism in Los Angeles County Child Welfare. UCLA Pritzker Center for Strengthening Childre ..read more
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Child Welfare Update: February 2024
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
2M ago
Greetings to my faithful readers! I’m trying out a different format for Child Welfare Monitor–a monthly newsletter format that highlights events and information that catch my eye. I’m not ruling out a single-issue piece now and then, particularly when there is a major new report or data source to discuss and analyze. Please let me know what you think of the new format. If you can think of a more exciting title than “Child Welfare Update,” let me know. And if you do find this to be a useful resource, please share it with your colleagues. Adam Montgomery convicted of Harmony Montgomery’s death ..read more
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Child Maltreatment 2022: reports increase but response lags
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
3M ago
“Child Maltreatment Victims Have Decreased for the Past Five Years to a New Low,” proclaimed the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) as it released Child Maltreatment 2022, its long-awaited annual compendium of child maltreatment data shared by the states. Contrary to the headline, the report says nothing about the actual incidence of child abuse and neglect. It does show that in Federal Fiscal Year 2022, calls to child protective services hotlines almost rebounded to pre-pandemic levels. But the number of investigations and assessments that CPS undertook in response to these calls ..read more
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Reform, not abolish, child welfare: A science-informed path
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
4M ago
By Antonio R. Garcia, Jill Duerr Berrick, Melissa Jonson-Reid, Richard P. Barth, John R. Gyourko, Patricia Kohl, Johanna K.P. Greeson, Brett Drake, and Victoria Cook A note from Child Welfare Monitor (CWM): CWM welcomes submissions from authors who represent points of view that are more evidence-based and child-centered than what is typically presented by leading media outlets and other child welfare publications. We are privileged to share this commentary from an illustrious group of child welfare scholars from schools of social work and social policy around the country. While this essay doe ..read more
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We are not here to save children: abuse and neglect deaths after contact with child welfare services in the District of Columbia, 2019-2021
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
6M ago
To my readers: This blog summarizes a report that is the culmination of nine months of work. It is part of my advocacy for children in the District of Columbia, which I share in my blog, Child Welfare Monitor DC. But I think this post and the underlying report will be of interest to child advocates, policymakers and researchers around the country because the findings and issues discussed are widely applicable. “We are not here to save children.” That is what I was told on the first day of my training as a child protective services worker at the District of Columbia’s Child and Family Services ..read more
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The child placement crisis: It’s time to lose the slogans and find real solutions
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
7M ago
By Judith Schagrin A note from Child Welfare Monitor: It is a privilege to publish this important essay by Judith Schagrin. Judith earned an undergraduate degree from the University of Pennsylvania and a master’s degree in social work (MSW) from the University of Maryland School of Social Work.  She unexpectedly found her passion in public child welfare, and more specifically, foster care after helping start an independent living preparation program for young people in care. After a decade as a foster care social worker specializing in adolescence in a large Maryland county department of ..read more
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Diverse opinions not accepted: Censorship by a contractor of the U.S. Children’s Bureau
Child Welfare Monitor
by childwelfaremonitor
8M ago
Instances of censorship and restrictions of free speech from both ends of the political spectrum have drawn increasing concern as the country’s polarization has increased. I have been very grateful that a digest of child welfare news and opinion articles funded by the federal government has for years been sharing my work–which often takes aim at the ideology prevailing in child welfare. But last July, the government contractor that prepares these digests declined to share one of my opinion pieces–while continuing to share other commentaries with a different perspective. My attempt to get an e ..read more
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