
Need strategies to involve birth families in your state CFSR? New tools can help.
Two new resources related to dads as permanency resources: What about the Dads? Child Welfare Agencies’ Efforts to Identify, Locate, and Involve Nonresident Fathers (PDF) and Fatherhood.gov, the new federal clearinghouse with sections for researchers and policymakers.
Questions about kinship care among social workers, policymakers, state legislators, or community partners? See Is Kinship Care Good for Kids? (PDF)
Kayla is like a complicated plant. She has roots with us— her adoptive family—and roots with her birth family. To be healthy as an adult, the more support she has in place, the better.
Donna Coraluzzo,
foster parent
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Ties with birth families—however complicated—are important to older youth in care, say two different studies.
Research shows:
Family members to whom older foster youth feel “very close:”
Source: A Chapin Hall Center for Children survey of 245 youth in care, ages 18 and 19, in Illinois, Iowa, and Wisconsin. Learn more at “Midwest Evaluation of the Adult Functioning of Former Foster Youth: Outcomes at age 19.”
“Children Missing from Care”: Links to a variety of resources on the subject from the National Resource Center for Family-Centered Practice and Permanency Planning
“Youth Who Run Away from Care,” a bibliography from the Child Welfare Information Gateway
Collected Materials: “Children Absent from Court-Ordered Placement without Legal Permission,” a best practice forum from September 2006 cosponsored by the Michigan State Court Administrative Office, Child Welfare Services Division, and the Michigan Judicial Institute.