Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2012
Abstract
In child welfare, the difference we can make as lawyers for parents, children, and the state, and as judges, is to prevent children from entering foster care unnecessarily. And we can end a child’s stay in foster care as quickly as possible. To do that, we have to fight against a powerful narrative of child welfare and against the accepted “top-down” paradigm of legal services.
In this essay, Professor Fraidin suggests that we can achieve our goals of limiting entries to foster care and speeding exits from it by looking for the strengths of the people involved in our cases, rather than their weaknesses. We can look for what they can do, rather than what they can’t. We can focus on their abilities, not the shortcomings over which we often obsess—like drug addiction, impatience, illiteracy, poverty. We can start from a premise that families involved with child welfare are bundles of assets, rather than collections of problems. If we can do all this, we can help families build, rather than watch them fall.
Publication Citation
19 Geo. J. on Poverty L. & Pol'y 97-109 (2012)
Scholarly Commons Citation
Fraidin, Matthew I., "Changing the Narrative of Child Welfare" (2012). Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works. 744.
https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/facpub/744
Included in
Family Law Commons, Juvenile Law Commons, Legal Profession Commons, Social Welfare Law Commons