It Takes Time to Shift Historical Paradigms: Changes in Structure, Governance, Perception, and Practice During a Decade of Child Welfare Policy Reform in the United States

Abstract

This research explores changes in structure, governance, perception and practice within the United States’ child welfare system over a ten-year period. Using an anthropological perspective and holistic approach, the child welfare system is presented as a type of meta-organizational culture inclusive of subsystems and subcultures which are all embedded in historical and socioeconomic context that involves alternations between child safety and family preservation approaches to care. Guided by a grounded theory approach to qualitative data analysis, content analysis of child welfare organization documents, child welfare stakeholder interview transcripts, community governance partner surveys, and observational field notes was performed. Findings are presented within a systems theory framework and include emphasis on 1) systems change as a nonlinear, evolving process that takes time to sustain real change, 2) externalities and emergencies, as well as response to crises as ever present influential factors impacting system change and the creation of shared meaning and perceptions of, 3) the challenges involved in aligning structural views on poverty with practice models that more often employ the idea that poverty is individual, 4) the merit of privatization for social services if the reform is designed to create a public private partnership inclusive of caring for all children and families in a community, and 5) the value of flexibility and variance in local system design in order to best match a community’s needs and resources.

Presenters

Amy Vargo
Research Assistant Professor, Child and Family Studies, College of Behavioral and Community Studies, University of South Florida, Florida, United States

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Cultural Studies

KEYWORDS

ANTHROPOLOGY, CHILD WELFARE, ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE, PERCEPTIONS OF POVERTY, PRIVATIZATION, COMMUNITY-BASED