via GIPHY
Great news,
everyone! It’s now official: Unlike every other aspect of American life, the
child welfare system has eradicated racism!
Like the parrot in the famous Monty Python sketch when it comes to child
welfare, racism is gone! It is no
more! It has ceased to be!
How do we
know? Because the dean of an actual school of social work says so. Toward the conclusion of a power-point
presentation aimed at social work students planning to work in child
welfare, Richard Barth, dean of the School of Social Work at the University of
Maryland, sums things up this way:
We can celebrate our success in developing a CWS [child
welfare system]* that does not result in evidence of biased outcomes. This has
long been an aspiration of CWS and it appears that it is, largely, realized.
Let us now
pause, sip some celebratory champagne and contemplate the sheer magnitude of
this achievement.
After all,
no one denies there is racism in the police. In fact, the president of the
International Association of Chiefs of Police has admitted
it and apologized. I’ll bet child welfare practitioners are really proud
that they don’t have to admit any such thing!
And it’s not just police.
● We know
there is racism
in medicine.
● We know
there is racism
in science.
●
We know there is racism
in journalism
● We know
there is racism
in academic publishing.
● We know
there is racism
in everything else in academia.
● We know
there is racism in
housing.
● We know
there is racism
in hiring.
● We know there is racism
in who gets followed around by store security.
● We know
there is racism
in who can hail a cab.
But if Barth is right, when it comes to the pandemic of American
racism, child welfare, and only child welfare has achieved herd
immunity!
The caucus of
denial
Of course,
there has long been a de facto “caucus of denial” in child welfare, a
group that says the enormous disparities in who gets reported for child abuse,
who gets substantiated, who gets taken away from their families and who does or
does not get reunified are solely due to Black people supposedly being worse
parents who are more prone to endangering their children to the point where
systems dominated by a white power structure must rush in and save them.
Not that that’s racist, you
understand. No, no. They claim it’s just that all that historic
racism and oppression made Black people more likely to be bad parents. (In the world of the
caucus of denial, the word “racism” almost always is preceded by the modifier historic
– because, remember, it’s all in the past.)
Those who hold such views have good
intentions; they really want to help children and families. But it’s no wonder the system they have
helped to build and now defend in order to do that has backfired. The existence of this
caucus of denial does, indeed, distinguish child welfare from other professional
fields, but not in a good way.
How, then,
does Barth get around the study after study
after study that control for all other variables and still find that, even
when all else is equal, children are more likely to be declared abused or
neglected, and more likely to be torn from their families, if they are not
white? Simple, he ignores them. As another slide explains:
We did not address the usual questions of (1) the reasons
for disproportionality in foster care or (2) whether [child protective
services] delivers equitable decision-making regarding substantiation and
placement—we believe that those have been well addressed in prior research.
So how do
you conclude that racism has been eradicated in child welfare and ignore all
those studies about biased decision-making?
By looking at much narrower questions, and extrapolating way beyond the
evidence. Thus, in the presentation and
in a paper
on which it is based, Barth and his
co-authors claim:
● “Current
research with adequate comparisons provides no robust evidence to support the
idea that children have worse outcomes from CWS involvement.” [Emphasis
added.]
● The
outcomes for Black children are no worse than the outcomes for white children,
although “few studies focused on Black children.”
Could they
possibly have set the bar any lower?
The first
thing to understand here is that Barth & Co. are talking about “child
welfare services,” a category that includes both foster care and services to
families in their own homes. Although
child welfare services often exist largely to make
the helpers feel good, some such services are genuinely helpful, such as
the Homebuilders
Intensive Family Preservation Services program and, where genuinely needed, the
right kinds of drug treatment. And a
few, innovative systems actually provide concrete help to ameliorate the worst
aspects of poverty.
Far fewer studies compare the
outcomes for children placed in foster care to comparably-maltreated children
left in their own homes. But the
findings from many of them are
alarming. Barth and his co-authors
get around this by minimizing or ignoring studies that don’t come out the way
they want them to.
Even with all that, the best they
can claim is: Well, after disrupting all these families lives, tearing the
children from their loved ones, forcing them into foster care, and wasting
billions of dollars that could have been used to help alleviate family poverty,
you critics can’t prove that we actually made things worse!
So let’s consider what that means. Consider a study of what is widely considered
one of the finest, most elite foster care programs in America, run by Casey
Family Programs. That study found that
among alumni of the program:
● They had twice the level of PTSD
of veterans of the first Gulf War.
● Only one in five was doing well
in later life.
● The former foster children were
three times more likely to be living in poverty –
and fifteen times less likely to
have finished college.
● At least one-third were abused by
a foster parent or another adult in a foster home.
All of which raises one more
question: If, in fact, the system really doesn’t do any harm anyway, are Barth
and his coauthors equally sanguine about the children torn from their parents
at the Mexican border by the Trump Administration?
The leap of logic about race
Barth’s next great leap concerns
race. As noted above, Barth and his
coauthors found few studies that directly compared outcomes for children placed
in foster care to comparably-maltreated children left in their own homes – and,
also as noted above, they sidestepped the massive studies showing that in typical
cases the outcomes for the foster children were worse. But among those few studies of outcomes for
all children, even fewer actually tried to disaggregate the results based on
race. Yet based on these few studies,
Barth and Co. conclude that the outcomes are no different for Black children.

There
are plenty of studies (not discussed by Barth) that show that Black
children are
likely to stay in the system longer and are less likely to be
reunited with their parents. So what
Barth really seems to be saying is that in spite of the fact that the system
inflicts more foster care and longer foster care on Black children, they are so
resilient that their outcomes are no worse than those for white kids.
I am willing
to stipulate that the outcomes for youth in foster care tend to be rotten for
all races. So the fact that Black
children are:
● more likely to be placed in a
system
● more likely to spend more time in
a system
● and less likely to be reunified
from a system that, best case, may not make things worse means we need to put
the champagne away; there really is racial bias in child welfare after all.
Equally revealing are the reasons
Barth offers in his slide presentation for child welfare’s supposed amazing
success.
For starters, he appears to be in
denial about the idea that the system is anything but helpful. Consider this slide outlining an argument he
seeks to challenge - in which, by the way, he dismisses the arguments of those who think there is a racism problem in child welfare as mere "assumptions":
First, of course, the slide refers
to “abused” children when, in fact, most of the time the accusation is neglect
and that often means poverty. But also notice how “coercive” is in
quotation marks.
That’s because the self-image of
the child welfare field, cultivated by social work schools, is of friendly
helpers who are merely bringing “services” to those in need. In fact, child protective services is about
as coercive as a system can get. It is a police force that has more power than the police. Police
can stop a Black child on the street, throw him against a wall and frisk him. Child
protective services can march right into the home, stripsearch a Black child
and walk out with him, consigning the child to the chaos of foster care.
No, CPS workers don’t always do
that; but neither do the cops.
Perhaps we should pause for a
moment to consider the implications of giving this vast, unchecked power to the
same profession that includes so many who believe that profession has eradicated
racism.
Barth makes a similar error in
another slide when he seeks to imply that Black children are taken away more
often because they are more often victims of “confirmed” child
“maltreatment.” This claim is built on
two weasel-words.
“Confirmed” is not a legal term;
it’s a term coined originally by those who have spent decades fomenting
hype and hysteria about child abuse to make subjective guesses by
caseworkers sound more definitive. “Confirmed”
does not mean a court found anyone guilty.
It doesn’t mean a neutral factfinder heard both sides. “Confirmed” means only that a caseworker
checked a box on a form stating s/he thinks it is at least slightly more likely
than not that “maltreatment” occurred.
The second weasel word is “maltreatment.”
Overwhelmingly “maltreatment” means
neglect, which, as noted above, often means poverty. Since Black people are more likely to be
poor, if you confuse poverty with neglect and then call the neglect “maltreatment,”
of course you’ll get the result cited by Barth.
What Barth
really is offering here is the ultimate in circular reasoning: The results of
subjective, biased caseworker guesses about “maltreatment” are used to “prove”
there is no bias!
Of course, having performed the
miracle of eradicating racism from child welfare, Barth knows we mere mortals
will want to know how they did it. He
offers two explanations. The first is the equivalent of the old “some of my
best friends are …” line. Says Barth:
“CWS has a diverse workforce.”
That’s certainly true at the lowest
levels – frontline caseworkers – in big cities.
But that’s also true of the police.
In Philadelphia 43%
of police officers are nonwhite. In New York City 49%
of police are nonwhite. In Chicago it’s 52%
and in Los Angeles it’s 55% So by Barth’s logic, there’s no racism on big-city
police forces either.
Academic social work is notably
less diverse. In 2016, fewer than
one-third of full-time social work professors were from “historically
underrepresented groups” according
to the Council on Social Work education.
And those who seem most prominent in child welfare’s caucus of denial have
long been almost exclusively white. So
either Black professionals and academicians in the field don’t understand the
research, or they know something Prof. Barth does not.
Talk, talk talk
Barth’s other explanation for child
welfare’s astounding success is that “CWS has been in conversation about race
equity for 50 years.” There are several
problems with this:
● Talking about a problem doesn’t
solve it – particularly when racism is the reason the system in question was
created in the first place.
● Though the first effort to start
the conversation dates back to 1972, little attention was paid until 30 years
later, with the publication of Prof. Dorothy Roberts’ landmark book, Shattered
Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare.
Even then, as another social work school dean, Alan Detlaff, and his co-authors
explain in
the very article that got Barth so upset, talking about racism in child
welfare made the field so uncomfortable that the caucus of denial managed to
sidetrack the issue until demands for racial justice became impossible to
ignore in 2020.
If Barth really does believe that
50 years of endless social work conferences have solved the racism problem,
presumably he can pinpoint exactly when that happened. Presumably, it wasn’t 49 years ago – even
child welfare couldn’t have wiped out racism in a single year! But the “caucus of denial” has been around
for awhile, so apparently it didn’t just happen yesterday, either.
So, Prof. Barth: When did it
happen? When was the last vestige of
racism eradicated from child welfare? December
20, 1987? March 11, 1992? November 10, 2004? February 25, 2014? Tell us the date so we can make it a national
holiday and use it as an example for all those other, less enlightened
professions!
While he doesn’t say exactly when
it happened, Barth does go on to say that child welfare has been so successful
that “Additional diversity training of the CWS workforce may not be needed.”
Though there is debate over the
effectiveness of such training, the evidence of the need is overwhelming. But don’t wait until the caseworkers are on
the job.
Clearly, it needs to begin in the
social work schools.
*-In the presentation CWS seems to be used interchangeably
to stand for Child Welfare System and Child Welfare Services