From Pariahs to Partners: How parents and their allies changed New York City's child welfare system

Author:   David Tobis (Executive Director, Executive Director, Fund for Social Change, New York, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780195099881


Pages:   288
Publication Date:   06 June 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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From Pariahs to Partners: How parents and their allies changed New York City's child welfare system


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Overview

At the end of the 20th century, New York City had one of the worst child welfare systems in the United States: 50,000 children were in foster care; they and their families were often neglected or abused by the system; parents had no voice; and the services designed to protect children were more often harming, rather than helping, them.From Pariahs to Partners tells for the first time the inspiring story of the parents and their allies--child welfare commissioners, social workers, lawyers, and foundation officers--who joined together to change the system. David Tobis situates this remarkable success within the larger history of child services in the U.S., a roller coaster of alternating crisis and reform that failed to produce lasting change. But the major focus of the book is on individual parents-most of them women, many of them black or Latina, and all of them poor-who came back from the ""other side"" of domestic violence, drug addiction, homelessness, and poverty to fight for their rights and their children. Many of these parents recognized their own role in the wrenching experience of losing custody of their children. They entered drug treatment programs, underwent intensive counseling, left abusive relationships, got jobs, filed lawsuits, and were reunited with their sons and daughters. Some took the next step and trained to become parent organizers. Tobis shows how their efforts increased benefits for families and reduced the number of children in foster care in New York City to 15,000 in 2011. David Tobis was a central figure in the child welfare reform movement, and From Pariahs to Partners draws on his own personal experience, as well detailed case examples from parent advocates, to tell a rare story of the triumph of individual and collective activism over bureaucratic inertia and ineptitude.

Full Product Details

Author:   David Tobis (Executive Director, Executive Director, Fund for Social Change, New York, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 15.70cm
Weight:   0.544kg
ISBN:  

9780195099881


ISBN 10:   0195099885
Pages:   288
Publication Date:   06 June 2013
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction Chapter 1: The New York Chapter 2: Parents Chapter 3: Tilling the Soil: The Groundwork for Parent Activism Chapter 4: Parents Find Their Voice Chapter 5: Other New York City Parent Organizations Chapter 6: Parent Participation Across the Country Chapter 7: What Improved, What Hasn't and What's Beginning to Slip Chapter 8: Conclusions Epilogue Annex I: Vision and Strategy for the Future Abbreviations

Reviews

<br>.. . From Pariahs to Partners: How Parents and their Allies Changed New York City's Child Welfare System, Tobis describes the child protection system's many failings. Troubled families are found everywhere, but . . . as Tobis shows, it comes down hard on poor families with much less serious problems. --New York Review of Books, July 12, 2012 <br><p><br> This labor of love draws on the author's decades of commitment to the cause of children and their families in New York. Tobis nails the argument that - unless they are in extreme danger - children do better with their families than they do in care. Yet the New York child welfare system is, as he sees it, geared towards social control and its own processes, rather than the rights and needs of children and their families. This is a book that speaks truth to power, through the voices of parents who have found the courage to take on the system and have emerged victorious. -- Carol Bellamy, Esq, Chair, Global Partnership for Education; former executive director of UNICEF <br><p><br> Cities across the country are struggling to improve the way our families are treated. Tobis's book, From Pariahs to Partners, presents the powerful and moving story of how parents collaborated with New York City's government to overhaul its child welfare system. The system has improved dramatically as a result. The book presents a lesson for parents and governments everywhere. -- Cory Booker, JD, Mayor of Newark, New Jersey <br><p><br> The courage and resilience of parents, especially those besieged by poverty and other stresses, are often ignored and misunderstood. From Pariahs to Partners shows parents' potential for promoting real and sustained reform in child welfare and in mental health, juvenile justice, and other child-serving systems. Parents must be engaged in decisions about their children and empowered as advocates for system reforms. I hope we will embrace this book's call to do so. -- Marian Wright Edelman, President, Chil


Author Information

David Tobis, PhD, is currently a principal of Maestral International (MaestralintL.Com), and was the Executive Director of the Fund for Social Change. For more than three decades he has worked to reform child welfare in New York and the United States. Beginning in 1991 he worked as a consultant to UNICEF and the World Bank to prevent children, the disabled and the elderly from being placed in long-term residential institutions in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. His monograph, published by the World Bank, The Transition from Residential Institutions to Community-Based Services in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union became the basis for the World Bank's strategy in the area. More recently he has worked with UNICEF and various foundations to strengthen child protection systems in countries throughout the world. He was previously Director of Human Services for New York City Council President Carol Bellamy. He was a Fulbright scholar to Guatemala and a Revson Fellow at Columbia University. He graduated from Williams College and received a Ph.D. in sociology from Yale University.

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