Publication | Closed Access
The intersection of race, poverty and risk: understanding the decision to provide services to clients and to remove children.
180
Citations
5
References
2008
Year
EthnicityDiscriminationEducationHealth DisparitiesRacial DisparitiesRaceGroup DisparitiesAfrican American StudiesPovertyRacial GroupRacismEthnic DiscriminationRacial EquityHealth SciencesDecision-making ProcessPublic PolicyUnderserved PopulationChild AbuseRacial JusticeDisadvantaged BackgroundChildren's RightChild DevelopmentAfrican American FamiliesSociologyChild Health PolicySocial PolicyChild ProtectionFoster Care
Studies have found that certain racial groups, particularly the children of African American families, are placed in foster care at a higher rate than children of other races. These families are also sometimes found to be afforded fewer services that might prevent these removals, relative to families of other races. It is unclear why this is so. Poverty has been suspected, and sometimes found, to be the primary cause of the disparity. Lacking in some of these analyses, however, was how risk of future abuse/neglect to the child entered into the decisions and particularly, how assumptions about race, poverty, and risk are factored into the decision-making process. It is important to understand this process if we are to find a way to correct it. The current study addresses this process.
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