This page contains documents and other resources related to children's care in the Americas. Browse resources by region, country, or category.
Displaying 1781 - 1790 of 3116
This paper reviews the development, behavioral, and mental health needs of children in foster care.
This cover story from the Islamic Society of North America's Islamic Horizons publication highlights the need for more Muslim foster families in the US.
En este documento se presentan los principales resultados de una investigación se propuso conocer las dinámicas y trayectorias de transición del sistema de cuidados alternativos a la autonomía de los y las jóvenes que vivieron en instituciones de cuidado residencial de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina.
This report presents preliminary results from an evaluation of the Home Visiting Pilot Program, serving pregnant or parenting youth in foster care.
This factsheet outlines the types of adoption support and preservation services available in the U.S., their benefits, and ways to find services in your area.
This paper explores what happens to children separated from their families at the U.S. border with Mexico by examining the nature of the services and programs provided while they are in temporary foster care.
This bulletin highlights supports and services for kinship caregivers, training for caseworkers and caregivers, and examples of successful kinship care programs.
This Comment will look first at the mechanics behind rehoming—what it is and where it fits into the legal framework of the child welfare system. Next, it will look at the causes of rehoming, focusing specifically on how trauma in a child’s background can create a need for specialized training techniques. Lastly, it will look at other states’ legislation to combat rehoming and suggest different areas where Texas can improve its child welfare laws to both prevent and deter rehoming.
This comment will argue that unaccompanied alien children have a due process right to appointed counsel at the government’s expense.
his Note explores how the standard practice of removing a child without prior judicial authorization has quietly contributed to a civil rights crisis by enabling racial bias to go unchecked in the placement decision-making process.