Child Welfare Information Gateway Logo Child Welfare Information Gateway.  Protecting Children, Strengthening Families  
Search Child Welfare Information Gateway
Advanced Search | Search Tips | Search A-Z | Glossary

RSS RSS  

Topics Family Centered Practice Child Abuse & Neglect Preventing Child Abuse & Neglect Responding Supporting & Preserving Families Out-of-Home-Care Achieving & Maintaining Permanency Adoption Systemwide Resources National Foster Care & Adoption Directory Online Catalog Library Search State Statutes Search Statistics User Manual Series Related Organizations Conference Calendar Find Help With a Personal Situation Children's Bureau Express Online Digest Children's Bureau Express Online Digest









Home > Family Involvement in Public Child Welfare Driven Systems of Care > Systems of Care and Family Involvement: Defining Family Involvement

Family Involvement in Public Child Welfare Driven Systems of Care
A Closer Look
Author(s):  National Technical Assistance and Evaluation Center for Systems of Care
Year Published:  2008
email Email print pdf Print  (PDF 1001 KB) Share Share

Rate Rate This    Not yet rated.






  previous You are in section:
next

Systems of Care and Family Involvement: Defining Family Involvement

In child welfare driven systems of care, launching and sustaining system change requires the meaningful participation of families as partners, as much as public and private child- and family-serving agencies and other stakeholders, in the network of service providers that comprise systems of care.

Involving families as partners means that agencies and stakeholders:

  • Acknowledge families as experts on their own needs;
  • Ensure an active and meaningful role for family members in a variety of areas; and
  • Provide diverse opportunities for family members to participate in shared decision-making.

However, communities face considerable challenges in making family-agency partnerships a reality. Unlike parents involved with many other child-serving systems, most parents involved with child welfare do not request services from or self-refer to child welfare agencies. Additional stressors accompanying the possibility of termination of parental rights strain the intended helping relationship between agency practitioners and child welfare-involved families even further (Whipple & Zalenski, 2006). Under such conditions, distrust and resistance can impede progress toward fostering family-agency partnerships.

  previous You are in section:
next

email Email print pdf Print  (PDF 1001 KB) Share Share

 

Download FREE Adobe Acrobat® Reader™ to view PDF files located on this site.

Contact Us | Disclaimer and Policies | Link to Us | Accessibility | Children's Bureau | USA.gov

Home | About Us | FAQs | Highlights | Press Room | Free Subscriptions | Send Us Comments | Resources in Spanish | Site Map | Family-Centered Practice | Child Abuse & Neglect | Preventing Child Abuse & Neglect | Responding to Child Abuse & Neglect | Supporting & Preserving Families | Out-of-Home Care | Achieving & Maintaining Permanency | Adoption | Systemwide | National Foster Care & Adoption Directory | Online Catalog | Library Search | State Statutes Search | Statistics | User Manual Series | Related Organizations | Conference Calendar | Find Help With a Personal Situation | Children's Bureau | Children's Bureau Express Online Digest
Department of Health and Human Services Logo