Results 181 to 190 of about 222,487 (301)
Care Providers of Indigenous Children and Youth in the Child Welfare System: A Scoping Review
ABSTRACT Indigenous children continue to be significantly over‐represented in child welfare systems in Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand. This scoping review represents a subset of a larger review, the objective of which was to consolidate the extant literature on Indigenous child welfare.
Amanda R. Ervin +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Intervention to prevent child custody loss in mothers with schizophrenia. [PDF]
Seeman MV.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Globally, millions of children are adopted or placed in alternative care settings (i.e., residential, foster, or kinship care). The current study explores the factors leading to separation from parents and adoption or placement in alternative care by investigating orphanhood status, perceived antecedents to placement, types of alternative care
Nicole Gilbertson Wilke +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Introduction to the Special Issue on Working With High-Conflict Families in Custody Contexts: A Call to Action. [PDF]
Northey WF, Chang J, Guyette E.
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT Parental separation is a process that impacts children's lives before parents decide to separate, during the physical separation and in the adjustment that follows, which may continue for many years. This study draws on the retrospective accounts of 30 young adults (aged 18–30) who experienced parental separation in childhood, to identify what
Susan Kay‐Flowers
wiley +1 more source
Understanding Family Dynamics in Mixed‐Status Families: A Qualitative Interpretive Meta‐Synthesis
ABSTRACT In the United States, mixed‐status families, where at least one member lacks legal immigration status, face persistent challenges related to deportation, which disrupt family stability, influence parental practices and impact children's identity formation.
Maryam Rafieifar +2 more
wiley +1 more source
How Are Children Involved? Participation of Children in the Process of Matching With Foster Families
ABSTRACT Children have the right to be informed and to express their views on all matters affecting them. When children are placed in foster care, social services are responsible for ensuring that the child receives ‘good care’. This requires a matching process. Matching means that children and foster families must ‘fit together’.
Ann‐Sofie Bergman +4 more
wiley +1 more source
Social justice with harm reduction approaches for mothers who use opioids: an international comparative ethnographic study with community engaged methods. [PDF]
Boeri MW +3 more
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT This study explores qualitative data capturing the strengths and challenges of residential care from the perspective of 512 youth in Illinois child welfare residential care in November 2018. Ninety percent of eligible youth participated in a Youth Experience of Care survey, with youth providing more negative than positive feedback about ...
Patricia Garibaldi +5 more
wiley +1 more source

