Existing literature reveals that Black and Indigenous children are overrepresented in the child welfare system, that poverty is among the key factors producing this overrepresentation, and that child poverty is racialized. As such, tackling poverty and its racialization is an important component of an overall strategy to address overrepresentation. As the income tax system provides support to families with children, including through the Canada Child Benefit (CCB) program, this article investigates its role and effectiveness in reducing child poverty in general and racialized poverty in particular. Our main conclusions include the following: the CCB is arguably the best anti-child poverty instrument in Canadian tax history; it is reasonably...
My name is Reina Foster, an Anishinaabekwe from Lac Seul First Nation in Treaty #3. I am the former ...
Background: The overrepresentation of Black families in child welfare systems across the various geo...
Children from families living in conditions of economic hardship are at five times greater risk of s...
Existing literature reveals that Black and Indigenous children are overrepresented in the child welf...
Contributions to volume 28:1 of the JLSP offered poignant insights into the root sources of the over...
The removal of children from their families and communities has long-lasting and often devastating c...
This article focuses on how colonialism, anti-Black racism and white supremacy are embodied by Ontar...
This paper examines the contribution that federal legislation could make to the governance of Indige...
This article imagines a new model for child welfare in Ontario, specifically for African Canadian ch...
While child care policy has been the subject of many governmental inquiries and much lobbying activi...
I am very grateful to Canada for what it has done for impoverished people, refugees, and immigrants ...
In January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in First Nations Child and Family Caring Society...
It is time for policemakers to reimagine and dismantle the child welfare system. This Article provid...
Policy perspective Many Canadian children experience poverty at some point in their childhood. Accor...
This Article focuses specifically on.tax-transfer integration of work-related child care assistance....
My name is Reina Foster, an Anishinaabekwe from Lac Seul First Nation in Treaty #3. I am the former ...
Background: The overrepresentation of Black families in child welfare systems across the various geo...
Children from families living in conditions of economic hardship are at five times greater risk of s...
Existing literature reveals that Black and Indigenous children are overrepresented in the child welf...
Contributions to volume 28:1 of the JLSP offered poignant insights into the root sources of the over...
The removal of children from their families and communities has long-lasting and often devastating c...
This article focuses on how colonialism, anti-Black racism and white supremacy are embodied by Ontar...
This paper examines the contribution that federal legislation could make to the governance of Indige...
This article imagines a new model for child welfare in Ontario, specifically for African Canadian ch...
While child care policy has been the subject of many governmental inquiries and much lobbying activi...
I am very grateful to Canada for what it has done for impoverished people, refugees, and immigrants ...
In January 2016, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in First Nations Child and Family Caring Society...
It is time for policemakers to reimagine and dismantle the child welfare system. This Article provid...
Policy perspective Many Canadian children experience poverty at some point in their childhood. Accor...
This Article focuses specifically on.tax-transfer integration of work-related child care assistance....
My name is Reina Foster, an Anishinaabekwe from Lac Seul First Nation in Treaty #3. I am the former ...
Background: The overrepresentation of Black families in child welfare systems across the various geo...
Children from families living in conditions of economic hardship are at five times greater risk of s...