| from the January 03, 2002 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0103/p17s1-bogn.html
With friends like these, black children don't need enemiesA law professor claims social service organizations are systematically destroying African-American familiesBy Allan Miller Jornell typifies the black
welfare mother who cannot comprehend, let alone navigate, Chicago's
labyrinthine foster-care system, which seems determined to prevent her
from regaining custody of her little boy.
She had her first child 25 years ago, when she was 15. Dropping out of
school, she moved in with her boyfriend's mother, who took over raising
the child. She passed a GED test, took some secretarial training, and
worked at an assortment of temporary jobs. "By the time she reached her
30s," Dorothy Roberts writes in "Shattered Bonds," "Jornell was plagued
with severe health problems that kept her from holding down a job. She was
overweight and diabetic, and she had started drinking and smoking crack."
Since then, she has tried to turn her life around and hold onto her second
child, who was born in 1998. After becoming pregnant, she stayed clean and sober and enrolled in a
prenatal program. Jornell was shunted from one welfare caseworker to the
next until the baby was judged at risk and taken from her. She was
subjected to numerous evaluations to determine whether she could be
trusted to raise her son. Although a clinical psychiatrist concluded that
she loved and would care for him, the Parenting Assessment Team
recommended against immediate reunification with her son, who remains in
foster care. Welcome to the world of Chicago's child-welfare system, which confronts
poor, predominantly black people. Roberts's blistering polemic notes that
nearly half of the children who are taken from their mothers and placed in
foster care nationwide are African-American. That grim statistic becomes
even more so given that black children constitute just 17 percent of the
nation's youth. Chicago's foster-child population is 95 percent black. What are the public policy implications of this sorry situation,
particularly given the most recent welfare reform, which promises to
destabilize still more black families? Roberts asks and answers this question in a way that is certain to
inflame passions. Rather than recycle the standard theory that child
protective services treat all poor families dreadfully, she says, "Black
families are being systematically demolished." Thus, Roberts puts a
sinister twist on Daniel Patrick Moynihan's warning four decades ago of
the black family's impending disintegration. Roberts is a professor at the Northwestern University School of Law.
She's written scores of articles and essays, and her scathing social
criticism about reproductive rights has caused considerable consternation
among those who would just as soon ignore the harsh challenges that have
routinely confronted poor black women in America. One may bristle at her thesis that women of color are being singled out
by a white-dominated society bent on the destruction of their families.
But it's hard to dispute her statistics about the dramatic racial
disparity of children in protective custody and how that disparity is
replicated in the nation's jail and prison populations. Concluding that there is scant evidence to suggest the foster-care
system is benefiting black children, Roberts calls for substantive changes
- respecting the cultural differences of poor families while addressing
the deprivation that exists in many homes. She envisions a child-welfare
system that is "culturally competent," which is to say more attuned to the
diverse clientele it serves. Moreover, she would give parents a greater say in the way services are
delivered. This would, Roberts insists, remove the neocolonial aspect of
an essentially racist program. Roberts's blunt accusations are bound to offend, but she revels in
raising the hackles of what she regards as a comfortably numb society that
has for centuries treated people of color with a not-so-thinly-veiled
contempt. Alan Miller is an editorial writer for The San Diego Union-Tribune. "Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare" By Dorothy Roberts Basic Books 341 pp., $27.5 Full HTML
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