This article first sets out the child welfare system\u27s assumption that there is a child welfare exception to the Fourth Amendment and then describes the ways it is used to facilitate child maltreatment investigations. It goes on to analyze the validity of this assumption according to current Fourth Amendment doctrine including under the special needs administrative exception. (This analysis may be particularly useful to both family/children\u27s law scholars as well as to Fourth Amendment scholars, as it examines all of the state and federal appellate cases addressing the subject, and provides a most up-to-date evaluation of the Supreme Court\u27s special needs doctrine.) Finally, the article makes the normative argument that a child ...
Since the Supreme Court’s widely criticized decision in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of S...
The article focuses on child safety and discusses a case of Joshua DeShaney, a child abuse victim wh...
It may seem counterintuitive, but children in foster care are more likely to achieve permanency if w...
This article first sets out the child welfare system\u27s assumption that there is a child welfare e...
This note argues that the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement should not apply to interviews of pot...
The Fourth Amendment “special needs” doctrine distinguishes between searches and seizures that serve...
This Article is the third in a series addressing the conflict between state revenue maximization str...
Three million children are abused every year in the United States. Although there are some safeguard...
This article suggests that the scope of enforceable section 1983 rights is broader than most courts ...
Over the past hundred years, a consensus has emerged recognizing a parent\u27s ability to raise his ...
This Article argues that the focus of child welfare should be upon the adequacy of reasonable servic...
State laws provide a variety of means to protect children from self-inflicted or parentally-inflicte...
The six sections of this Article present the case for direct federal court involvement in aiding fos...
Investigating allegations of child abuse or neglect presents unique challenges, particularly if pare...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that in-school interviews of children regarding child abuse constitute se...
Since the Supreme Court’s widely criticized decision in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of S...
The article focuses on child safety and discusses a case of Joshua DeShaney, a child abuse victim wh...
It may seem counterintuitive, but children in foster care are more likely to achieve permanency if w...
This article first sets out the child welfare system\u27s assumption that there is a child welfare e...
This note argues that the Fourth Amendment warrant requirement should not apply to interviews of pot...
The Fourth Amendment “special needs” doctrine distinguishes between searches and seizures that serve...
This Article is the third in a series addressing the conflict between state revenue maximization str...
Three million children are abused every year in the United States. Although there are some safeguard...
This article suggests that the scope of enforceable section 1983 rights is broader than most courts ...
Over the past hundred years, a consensus has emerged recognizing a parent\u27s ability to raise his ...
This Article argues that the focus of child welfare should be upon the adequacy of reasonable servic...
State laws provide a variety of means to protect children from self-inflicted or parentally-inflicte...
The six sections of this Article present the case for direct federal court involvement in aiding fos...
Investigating allegations of child abuse or neglect presents unique challenges, particularly if pare...
(Excerpt) This Note argues that in-school interviews of children regarding child abuse constitute se...
Since the Supreme Court’s widely criticized decision in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of S...
The article focuses on child safety and discusses a case of Joshua DeShaney, a child abuse victim wh...
It may seem counterintuitive, but children in foster care are more likely to achieve permanency if w...