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NOBODY'S CHILDREN: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative [Hardcover]

Elizabeth Bartholet (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 10, 1999 0807023183 978-0807023181 1
Upwards of three million children are subject to severe forms of abuse or neglect annually in their homes, and more than half a million live in foster or institutional care, with the numbers growing exponentially. Substance abuse is wreaking havoc in home s and in the child-welfare system—80 to 90 percent of the children victimized by abuse and neglect are being raised by parents who use and abuse alcohol, cocaine, and other drugs during pregnancy. Children removed from their homes be cause of maltre atment languish in institutional care, often bouncing back and forth between foster families and their original families, with state agencies reluctant to terminate parental rights and move them on to adoption, however dim the prospects for nurturing at h ome.
Nobody's Children is an intense look at child welfare policies on abuse and neglect, foster care, and adoption. Elizabeth Bartholet, one of the nation's leading experts on family law, challenges the accepted orthodoxy that treats children as belonging to their kinship and their racial groups and that locks them into inadequate biological and foster homes. She asks us to apply the lessons learned from the battered women's movement as we look at battered children, and to question why family preservation ideology still reigns supreme when children rather than adult women are involved.

Bartholet asks us to take seriously the adoption option. She calls on the entire community to take responsibility for its children, to think of the children at risk of abuse and neglect as belonging to all of us, and to ensure that "Nobody's Children" become treasured members of somebody's family.


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

The book's jacket calls this an "intense look at child welfare policies on abuse and neglect." Precisely. Bartholet's subject is too weighty for casual reading and cannot be easily digested, but it does not falter in its criticisms of American child welfare policy. Examining legislation from all parts of the United States, Bartholet questions why "family preservation ideology still reigns supreme when children rather than adult women are involved." The reader is left with a multitude of questions and concerns about the way U.S. adoption policy is currently working, questions that are catalysts for invoking the changes that Bartholet espouses. Clear and consistent, this is recommended for public and academic libraries.ASheila Devaney, North Carolina State Univ. Libs., Raleigh
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

A disturbing look at how the lives of Americas modern-day orphans are sacrificed for the often unrealistic goal of keeping troubled families together. Bartholet (Family Bonds: Adoption and the Politics of Parenting, 1993), an expert on family law and an adoptive mother herself, traces the historical, political, and cultural reasons why battered and neglected children are far more likely to spend years in foster limbo, or be sent back to abusive homes, than to be adopted by loving families. The author charges that despite recent legislation that bars race as a factor, everyone from private foundation administrators to judges, lawyers, and bureaucrats continues to be guided by the notion that children should be cared for by relatives, or adopted by families who look like them. Back in 1972, the National Association of Black Social Workers denounced transracial adoption as a form of racial genocide. Though race-matching policies have gone underground since then, Bartholet believes they resurface in criteria like kinship and cultural competence. Because other relatives may not be up to the task of parenting, and because there are not enough minority families to adopt all the children who need them, the author asserts that race-matching essentially condemns many youngsters to lasting physical, cognitive, and emotional damage. Whereas wife beaters are treated like criminals, child abusers, often plagued by poverty and substance abuse, tend to be seen as victims themselves. Bartholet expresses sympathy for their plight but demands that social workers stop using precious child-welfare resources to prop up deeply disturbed families. What matters, she insists, is that the children get into homes where they can thrive. She also suggests, somewhat unrealistically, that the state could take a proactive role in reducing child abuse by instituting universal visitation of all families before and after birth. The author makes her case intelligently, fearlessly, and exhaustively. Curiously, since her subject matter is so wrenching, Bartholets writing lacks emotional power. Nobodys Children ultimately appeals not to the heart, but to the head. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Beacon Press; 1 edition (October 10, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0807023183
  • ISBN-13: 978-0807023181
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,821,202 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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28 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Issues of child abuse, family preservation, adoption, November 11, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: NOBODY'S CHILDREN: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative (Hardcover)
Read this book written by a civil rights lawyer, feminist and Harvard Law professor who challenges traditional left and right poliltical perspectives on child abuse, family preservation and adoption. She is the mother of one child by birth and two by adoption who writes with power and emotion about the meaning of parenting and family.

She looks at the battered women's movement and asks why we have come to think that adult women should be liberated from abusive homes but still insist that children be kept at home pursuant to family preservation policies without regard to the level of abuse and neglect suffered.

Bartholet takes on the child welfare establishment and asks us to join her in pushing for radical rethinking of first premises. She wants our society to take adoption seriously for the first time ever, moving abused and neglected children into real homes so that they can survive and thrive. She wants to knock down the racial barriers that stand in the way of "Nobody's Children" finding the parents they need. And, finally, she points out that now is the time for reform if ever there is a time.

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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This Book Changed My Life, December 27, 2003
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This review is from: NOBODY'S CHILDREN: Abuse and Neglect, Foster Drift, and the Adoption Alternative (Hardcover)
I am a mother of two birth children and one adopted child, adopted from foster care at age 13. I stumbled across this book in a bookstore one rainy day when I had hit the emotional low-point in my own adoption journey. I read it while I was struggling with the endless and maddening redtape and delays entailed in getting our foster child out of "the system" forever. "Nobody's Children" speaks to hundreds of thousands of Americans whose hearts and beliefs nudge them to contemplate domestic adoption, yet who encounter cultural and procedural barriers that discourage most from considering adoption from the foster care system. This is a carefully-researched and footnoted work by a distinguished former civil rights attorney--whose career included work at the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund and now Harvard Law School, where she teaches today. The author is herself both an adoptive and biological parent. Her book gave me new hope. I was inspired by it to work to help bring about the cultural shifts and procedural reforms described in this book, changes that will be required if our nation is truly serious about ending the tragedy (and travesty) of kids languishing in long-term foster care. Ignore reviews by some who utterly mischaracterize Bartholet's arguments. She, like Patrick Murphy before her, fully acknowledge that the vast majority of poor and minority families raise their children well and lovingly, and that far more social resources should be directed toward addiction treatment and supporting stressed-out birth mothers so they can keep their babies. Defenseless, innocent children are not, however, the chattel (private property) of their birth parents. All of us, as a civilized people, must speak out against policies and practices that severely limit a child's chance to be adopted after being subjected to acts of torture or repeated abuse and neglect. To fix "the system" and its horrors, more Americans need to open their homes to the children trapped in it. How to persuade people to consider adopting from foster care? Bartholet suggests a first step: imagine a system that promotes adoption as the best, instead of a second best, way to build a family. A book for dreamers and "doers" both.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Dated Yet Still Right On!, February 3, 2011
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I have been a single foster parent to two young sister for just over 21 months now. I have a love/hate relationship with this book. I love it because it backs up everything that I have concluded in my own experience about this system. I hate it because it depresses me that this book was published 11 years ago and is as accurate today as it was then.

Children in today's foster care system have become "plug-and-play" to CPS agencies. (That is my term, not Ms Bartholet's...) My "children" have been told they were leaving me on 6 different occassions: 1.) Two months in, going home to birth mom, didn't happen 2.) 5 months in, going home to birth mom, didn't happen 3.) 7 months in, going to live with a distant maternal cousin, didn't happen 4.) 13 months in, going to live with younger sister's birth father, didn't happen 5.) 16 months in, going to live with same maternal cousin, didn't happen and the last one 6.) 20 months in, going to live with birth mom, hasn't happened yet, although it is still planned. The children, currently 4 and 7, are too young to have to go through this emotional heck. Nobody in this system puts any emphasis on what this system does to the CHILDREN.

Nobody's Children clearly, concisely, and accurately depicts the system for what it is, a big hot mess. Despite the laws passed to diminish the time children languish in foster care systems (ASFA and Ohio House Bill 484) that require PERMANENCY planning around 15/12 months respectively, children are still facing long stints in foster care. Ms. Bartholet explains the impact of this in immense detail with accurate, and detailed footnotes. As she explains, and I can back up by experience, the unfortunate lack of clear definition of "permanency planning" has allowed local and state agencies to make up their own rules. For my county, birth families are given a minimum of two 6-month "extensions" to the ASFA. By this time, the birth connections of my foster children should have already been terminated based on federal and state law. The loophole, as Ms. Bartholet expresses in the book, is that with no clear definition, agencies can use their own judgment. For example, both the ASFA and the OH HB indicate that the agency must prove that they have done all they can towards reuining the child with the birth family. However, what does that mean? It varies from agency to agency, from county to county. In my county, children stay in care for years, whereas in a county just 2 hours away, birth rights are terminated in timely manner, children are then adopted with finalization of the same within 18-24 months.

In variably, this is the cycle: Child, age 4, enters CPS system. Enter Foster Family 1. Child stays 22 months. Child is reunited with birth mother/family member. Now child is aged 6. (This is assuming that the child has a good fit with first foster parent.) At age 4, the child has grown quite attached to his foster family, and now he is torn away to be returned to the same birth family that still causes the child bad dreams. Yes, the birth parent has done the very bare minimum required by the agency to be returned, but is that enough. So child is now 6 years old. Things go down the drain fast and within 6 months, child is removed again. The first foster family cannot take the child back because they have received another placement in the meantime. So child goes to another foster family. If luck is good, he will get another *good* family. (There are far more good families than bad, but I am not naive enough to believe that they are all great foster families.) By now, the child has been damaged more, experienced more attachment disruptions, and likely has little faith in the adults in his life. If he isn't acting out, he probably will begin soon. At the same time, until termination of parental rights happen, the child HAS to continue visits with the birth family who neglected/hurt him. He acts out beyond what his current foster family can handle. He is sent to another home. He may stay there another 6 months. By now, the agency finally terminates parental rights. But wait. Aunt Joann from 3 states over has indicated that she'd like to take the child. Because she is "kin", regardless of the fact that she doesn't personally know the child or his birth mother, she MUST be examined as a potential placement option. The child is forced to endure yet another visitation schedule with a complete stranger. Finally, another 6 months later, the child, now 7.5 years old (if not older) is made available for adoption. As luck would have it, his current foster placement does not want to adopt (some families really only do want to do only foster care) so he waits for a potential adoptive family. By now, his sense of trust is gone. His behavior issues have grown greatly, and while waiting to find an adoptive family, he grows out of control and is moved to a group home. Fast forward 10 years and this same child is now "Aging out of the system" as he turns 18 and is on his own, no family, adoptive or otherwise, to turn to for help. Yes my friends, this is exactly what is happening today in America. And these children who have aged out of the system are the same children who end up on drugs, committing crimes, being homeless, etc. The tax dollars that you spent keeping him in the system will now support him in his early adulthood as he enters a likely life of crime. If the he were a she, your tax dollars are now paying for the same system to support her child that has now been taken away from her and started in the same foster care system.

One wonders what would have happened had the child's birth parents' rights been terminated at 12 months, and the child, then age 5, could have been adopted by the foster family that he grew attached to, and whom he loved, and they loved in return.

She does not advocate taking children from poor families. There seems to be a continual stance of this from the communities that "lose" the most children. I have read unintelligible blogs, message board posts, etc., that all push the same stereotype: "Adoptive/Foster parents are those middle class people who can't have their own kids and want to steal *our* kids." That cannot be farther from the truth. In fact, in my Foster/Adopt Classes, there were only two middle-class "parents" in the class, myself, and another woman who had already raised two biological children. Most of the folks in this class fell into two categories: 1.) Working class couples who could not afford traditional adoption or 2.) Working Class couples/singles who CHOSE this path either because they had already raised bio children and had more love to give, or because they didn't see the rationale in bringing children into the world when there were so many who already were here and needed good parents. (the class was made up of about 10 couples and 4 single parents.) This data corresponds to what Ms. Bartholet reports in her book.

In fact, Ms. Bartholet highlights many, at the time, new programs that were having promising results in reaching out to the birth families before they could abuse/neglect their children. However, at the time of the publishing, those programs were not having long-lasting results. It doesn't take a rich person to parent well. In fact, I am quite certain that there are a great number of children who suffer similar consequences from "rich" families but do not end up in the foster care system due to extended familial connections. But, the numbers speak for themselves, there is greater abuses/neglects to children in poorer communities ravished by drugs and crime. I believe it was Isaiah Thomas' mother who raised him and his siblings on welfare, and they all grew to have successful lives. It isn't about the money. It is about the love.

There really are far too many argue points to highlight here. However, I'd highly recommend that anyone considering foster parenting, or foster/adopt options, to read this book. And for any case worker, agency director, the like, this book should be eye opening. Let's finally stop treating the youth of our lives, the future of our country, like they can be plopped from one home to another with no damage to their psyche. To suggest that children suffer forever from loss of family connections through adoption, and that the "loss" that brings to them is far worse than the damage brought upon by abuse and neglect (Yes, I have heard that argument used by case workers!) is preposterous and not based on one gram of evidence, anecdotal or otherwise. Children need loving homes. Period. First and foremost, they need their basic needs met. Those needs include emotional connections.

Anyway, go read the book. I can't help but wonder what would happen in our society if every lawmaker read this book.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
home visitor, family group decision making, intensive family preservation services, home visitation system, foster stipends, community partnership concept, child welfare world, nonkin foster care, family preservation efforts, visitation movement, adoption seriously, family preservation policies, permanency movement, partnership advocates, permanency options, maltreatment problem, foster care population, family preservation services, race matching, concurrent planning, welfare stipends, home visitation services, maltreatment rates, home visitation programs, child removal
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Community Partnership, United States, Native American, New York, Clark Foundation, New Zealand, The Edna, Richard Gelles, Supreme Court, The Child Welfare League of America, Barry Zuckerman, Adoption Assistance Act, Prevent Child Abuse
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