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    Moral Injury within the US Child Welfare System: A Call for Epistemic Justice

    Moral Injury within the US Child Welfare System by Haight, Wendy; Kingery, Linda;

    A Call for Epistemic Justice

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 64.00
      • The price is estimated because at the time of ordering we do not know what conversion rates will apply to HUF / product currency when the book arrives. In case HUF is weaker, the price increases slightly, in case HUF is stronger, the price goes lower slightly.

        28 896 Ft (27 520 Ft + 5% VAT)
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    28 896 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 18 November 2025

    • ISBN 9780197682005
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages384 pages
    • Size 234x156x22 mm
    • Weight 717 g
    • Language English
    • 647

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    Short description:

    Social outrage over the failings of public child welfare systems have a long history of spurring repeated cycles of dizzying change in policy and practice. Moral Injury within the US Child Welfare System presents a fresh perspective on how we can create a US public child welfare system that both protects children physically, and minimizes the psychological harm it causes to the professionals and the families they serve.

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    Long description:

    Child welfare systems around the world provide essential services to protect the lives of children who are abused and neglected. Yet these systems can also do great harm. These negative consequences of system involvement are primarily borne not by adults who are willfully neglecting or seriously abusing their children, but by families and communities who are struggling under generations of poverty, racism, and genocide. The harm is also to the professionals committed to helping families who find themselves in an adversarial system that, too often, compounds the problems of families and communities.

    Moral Injury within the US Child Welfare System presents a fresh perspective on how we can create a US public child welfare system that both protects children physically, and minimizes the psychological harm it causes to the professionals and the families they serve. This perspective emerged from the lived experiences of young people, parents, and professionals involved in the system. It also emerged from decades of on-the-ground social work practice and research experience; and from lessons learned from history, and child welfare systems around the world (African American, Indigenous, Scottish and Japanese). In this book, Haight and Kingery identify the significant psychological harm experienced by those within the US public child welfare system and consider implications for creating a more humane, just, and, ultimately, more successful child welfare system.

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    Table of Contents:

    Part 1: Introduction
    Addressing Psychological Safety within the US Child Welfare System
    Creating a More Compassionate, Just, and Effective Child Welfare System: Conceptual Frameworks and Methods
    Part 2: Moral Injury within the Us Child Welfare System
    Child Welfare in the United States from 1864 to the Present: A Comparative Case Study of the Wilson, Jordan, and Brown Families
    The Experiences of Contemporary Parents: "Basically I Look at it Like Combat"
    The Experiences of Contemporary Child Welfare Professionals: "How Ethical is it to Open the Floodgates When You Don't Have the Sandbags to Protect the City?"
    "I knew the System was Broken": The Experiences of young People
    Part 3: Intervening in Moral Injury within the Us Child Welfare System Lessons from Young People, Parents, and Professionals
    Everyday Coping with Moral Injury: Recovery Stories of Parents and Professionals
    Reorienting Narratives Toward Positive Development: Recovery Stories of Young People
    Part 4: Preventing Moral Injury within the Us Child Welfare System Lessons from Diverse Child Welfare Systems
    A "Shadow Child Welfare System" An African American Focus on Community, Relationships, and Spirituality
    Drawing on the Strengths of Tribal Nations and the Wisdom of Elders: An Anishinaabe Focus on Supporting our Relatives
    "Looking with Long Eyes": A Japanese Focus on Relationship Building with Vulnerable Families Over Time
    Rejecting a Crimnial Justice Model of Child Welfare: The Scottish Focus on Community Support Through the Children's Panels
    Part 5: Building Toward a Just and Effective Us Child Welfare System
    Some Reflections on Strengthening Epistemic Justice and Psychosocial Well-Being in the us Child Welfare System

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