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Yin, Robert T. – Social Work, 2004
Taking children away from their parents is risky business. Child protective services (CPS) workers are charged with monumental tasks and ever-increasing caseloads. As a countywide CPS supervisor in New Mexico, the author shared the pain of one caseworker who experienced daily stress, knowing that her sibling set of three young children had been…
Descriptors: Caseworkers, Social Work, Child Welfare, Child Abuse
Daro, Deborah – 2003
Over the past 30 years, the political response to child maltreatment and its prevention has experienced periods of frantic activity, often followed by long periods of benign neglect. To an extent, this pattern reflects deep differences among child welfare advocates, researchers and practitioners on how best to proceed. While most everyone agrees…
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, At Risk Persons, Caseworkers, Change Strategies
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Neustein, Amy; Lesher, Michael – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2006
Coohey's (2006) valuable research demonstrates that Child Protective Service (CPS) investigators use generally consistent criteria in determining when to charge a non-offending mother for failing to protect a child from sexual abuse. She concludes that the most reliable predictor that a formal charge of child neglect will be filed against a mother…
Descriptors: Sexual Abuse, Child Neglect, Child Abuse, Mothers
Ezell, Gene – Tennessee Education, 1979
Explains five functions a school can serve in a child abuse and child neglect cases. Notes other sources of help for abused children not yet of school age, such as play groups, family shelters, and crisis nurseries. Explains the flaws in various past methods of treating child abuse. (SB)
Descriptors: Agency Cooperation, Caseworkers, Child Abuse, Child Neglect
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Vieth, Victor I. – Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 2006
As this author traveled around the country, many university professors and domestic violence advocates told him that prosecuting or even intervening with social services is morally "wrong" in cases in which parents fail to protect their children. There are two problems with these arguments. First, these arguments assume that mothers should "never"…
Descriptors: Family Violence, Sexual Abuse, Child Abuse, Mothers