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Cardozo Public Law, Policy & Ethics Journal

Abstract

The article critiques the narrow focus of modern child welfare policy on rescuing children from abusive or neglectful families, arguing that this approach neglects the root causes of child welfare issues, particularly poverty. Using the metaphor of a stranger who refuses to merely rescue babies from a stream and instead seeks to address the source of the problem upstream, the article contends that child welfare policy must expand its scope to address systemic issues like poverty and inadequate social support for families. Current policy, the article argues, prioritizes adoption and foster care over preventing the conditions that lead to child removal, disproportionately affecting poor and minority families.

Disciplines

Law | Law and Race | Social Welfare Law

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