To highlight the individual and systemic practices that perpetuate the overuse of and reliance on kinship care and instead emphasize family reunification as the permanency plan for African American children in the child welfare system, the authors first discuss how kinship care is affected by federal child welfare policy and provide a historical perspective on how that policy has evolved. They then discuss the number and proportion of African American children entering the child welfare system and receiving kinship foster care, distinguishing between formal and informal kinship care. The conclusion addresses implications for practice and research, including the need to reevaluate child welfare policies, and demonstrates that kinship care is...
Kinship care has traditionally been an informal service that family members provide for each other i...
Expanding financial assistance to kinship placements can reduce disproportionality between racial mi...
Kinship care is a growing option for children needing out-of-home placements, but research has not k...
Current policy in the child welfare system encourages children to be placed with kin when removed fr...
Kinship foster care replaces a traditional, private African American family arrangement with a simil...
In supporting kinship care as a “new ” solution to old child welfare problems, we should acknowledge...
This study examined permanency outcomes of children in custody of the Mississippi Department of Fami...
The Black American community has been celebrated for the historical success of kinship care. With an...
This project explores the relational problems experienced in African-American women reared in the sy...
Kinship care has a far-reaching impact on child welfare agencies ’ permanency planning efforts and t...
M.A.Kinship families have cared for children on a full-time basis for thousands of years, and for ma...
The phenomenon of grandparents and other relatives raising children is a tradition rooted in the Afr...
ABSTRACT: Research about African-American children who overcome adversity to adapt successfully with...
Traditionally, when parents have been unable to lookafter their children due to death, illness, impr...
It has been eight years since the Children and Youth Services Review first special issue on kinship ...
Kinship care has traditionally been an informal service that family members provide for each other i...
Expanding financial assistance to kinship placements can reduce disproportionality between racial mi...
Kinship care is a growing option for children needing out-of-home placements, but research has not k...
Current policy in the child welfare system encourages children to be placed with kin when removed fr...
Kinship foster care replaces a traditional, private African American family arrangement with a simil...
In supporting kinship care as a “new ” solution to old child welfare problems, we should acknowledge...
This study examined permanency outcomes of children in custody of the Mississippi Department of Fami...
The Black American community has been celebrated for the historical success of kinship care. With an...
This project explores the relational problems experienced in African-American women reared in the sy...
Kinship care has a far-reaching impact on child welfare agencies ’ permanency planning efforts and t...
M.A.Kinship families have cared for children on a full-time basis for thousands of years, and for ma...
The phenomenon of grandparents and other relatives raising children is a tradition rooted in the Afr...
ABSTRACT: Research about African-American children who overcome adversity to adapt successfully with...
Traditionally, when parents have been unable to lookafter their children due to death, illness, impr...
It has been eight years since the Children and Youth Services Review first special issue on kinship ...
Kinship care has traditionally been an informal service that family members provide for each other i...
Expanding financial assistance to kinship placements can reduce disproportionality between racial mi...
Kinship care is a growing option for children needing out-of-home placements, but research has not k...