Take Me Home
Protecting America's Vulnerable Children and Families
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17 194 Ft
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 12 February 2009
- ISBN 9780195322620
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages208 pages
- Size 234x163x22 mm
- Weight 408 g
- Language English
- Illustrations 10 black and white line illustrations 0
Categories
Long description:
There is a profound crisis in the United States' foster care system, Jill Duerr Berrick writes in this expertly researched, passionately written book. No state has passed the federally mandated Child and Family Service Review; two-thirds of the state systems have faced class-action lawsuits demanding change; and most tellingly, well over half of all children who enter foster care never go home. The field of child welfare has lost its way and is neglecting its fundamental responsibility to the most vulnerable children and families in America.
The family stories Berrick weaves throughout the chapters provide a vivid backdrop for her statistics. Amanda, raised in foster care, began having children of her own while still a teen and lost them to the system when she became addicted to drugs. Tracy, brought up by her schizophrenic single mother, gave birth to the first of eight children at age fourteen and saw them all shuffled through foster care as she dealt drugs and went to prison. Both they and the other individuals that Berrick features spent years without adequate support from social workers or the government before finally achieving a healthier life; many people never do. But despite the clear crisis in child welfare, most calls for reform have focused on unproven prevention methods, not on improving the situation for those already caught in the system. Berrick argues that real child welfare reform will only occur when the centerpiece of child welfare - reunification, permanency, and foster care - is reaffirmed.
Take Me Home reminds us that children need long-term caregivers who can help them develop and thrive. When troubled parents can't change enough to permit reunification, alternative permanency options must be pursued. And no reform will matter for the hundreds of thousands of children entering foster care each year in America unless their experience of out-of-home care is considerably better than the one many now experience. Take Me Home offers prescriptions for policy change and strategies for parents, social workers, and judges struggling with permanency decisions. Readers will come away reinvigorated in their thinking about how to get children to the homes they need.
In her focus, Duerr Berrick takes a novel approach. Much of child welfare literature is child-centric, missing the parents' role in a child's development...By focusing on parents' experiences, Duerr Berrick paints a stark picture of the system's shortcomings and develops a unique perspective to address them. In Take Me Home, she pushes forward an agenda that can help an ailing system live up to that responsibility.
Table of Contents:
Securing a Safe Home for Children: A New National Priority
Prevention: Unrealized Potential, Unrecognized Faults
Reunification: One Pathway Home
After Adoption: Keeping a Connection to Home
Kinship Guardianship: Finding a Home Between Family and the State
Quality Foster Care: My Home for Now
Take Me Home
Appendix
Notes
Index