African American Families and Child Welfare
Reported more often to
social services for child abuse and neglect.
More likely
to have charges of abuse and neglect substantiated.
Receive fewer
preventive services.
More likely
to have their children placed in out-of-home care.
Children stay
in foster care longer.
Black children
overrepresented among those awaiting adoption.
Fewer prospective
African-American adoptive families.
Receive fewer
services overall.
Social workers have fewer
face-to-face contacts with black families.
Black foster
parents and kinship providers receive fewer services.
Fewer visits
occur between black parents, children, and siblings.
Higher occurrence
of termination of parental rights.
Less legal
representation.
Black children
involved in more transracial adoptions.
Source: Review of research literature
by Connie Polk, NC Division of Social Services (2000).