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Consumer Health > ConsHlth: Adoption
Out of Harm's Way: Creating an Effective Child Welfare System
Gelles, Richard
ISBN 13: 
9780190618018
ISBN 10: 
0190618019
Category: 
ConsHlth: Adoption
Edition: 
1
Publisher: 
Oxford University Press
Format: 
Cloth
Status: 
Print on Demand
Imprint: 
Oxford University Press
Affiliation: 
University of Pennsylvania School of Social Policy and Practice
Dimensions: 
6.2 x 0.9 x 9.3 in
Pages: 
200
Weight: 
2
Retail Price: 
34.99
Quantity On Hand: 
0
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Synopsis:
Despite many well-intentioned efforts to create, revise, reform, and establish an effective child welfare system in the United States, the system continues to fail to ensure the safety and well-being of maltreated children. Out of Harm's Way explores the following four critical aspects of the
system and presents a specific change in each that would lead to lasting improvements.

- Deciding who is the client. Child welfare systems attempt to balance the needs of the child and those of the parents, often failing both. Clearly answering this question is the most important, yet unaddressed, issue facing the child welfare system.
- Decisions. The key task for a caseworker is not to provide services but to make decisions regarding child abuse and neglect, case goals, and placement; however, practitioners have only the crudest tools at their disposal when making what are literally life and death decisions.
- The Perverse Incentive. Billions of dollars are spent each year to place and maintain children in out-of-home care. Foster care is meant to be short-term, yet the existing federal funding serves as a perverse incentive to keep children in out-of-home placements.
- Aging out. More than 20,000 youth age out of the foster care system each year, and yet what the system calls "emancipation" could more accurately be viewed as child neglect. After having spent months, years, or longer moving from placement to placement, aging-out youth are suddenly thrust into
homelessness, unemployment, welfare, and oppressive disadvantage.

The chapters in this book offer a blueprint for reform that eschews the tired cycle of a tragedy followed by outrage and calls for more money, staff, training, and lawsuits that provide, at best, fleeting relief as a new complacency slowly sets in until the cycle repeats. If we want, instead, to try
something else, the changes that Gelles outlines in this book are affordable, scalable, and proven.

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