Studyspark Study Document

Multicultural Child Welfare Resources Essay

Pages:2 (831 words)

Sources:4

Document Type:Essay

Document:#86453555


TOUGH LOVE, a Documentary about the Child Welfare System


Directed by Emmy-nominated director, Stephanie Wang, Tough Love depicts the life and struggle of a couple, Patrick (hailing from Seattle) and Hannah (hailing from the city of New York), as they traverse the US child welfare structure’s red tape to reclaim custody over their kids. The two have undergone the trauma of having their children taken away by governmental authorities. The film features vérité-type footage, besides exclusive views of child welfare courts, portraying a personal and intimate record of the couple’s challenges and victory while they tackle prior mistakes and try to assert their eligibility to enjoy another chance at raising their children. All through the course of the movie, the kids’ foster parents are shown, in addition to judges in charge of the case and child welfare specialists who can clearly grasp the working of this complicated system (Stephanie, 2015).



The movie marks the first of its kind allowed a 12-month screening period within the Seattle Family Treatment Court. It depicts never-before-seen scenes of court roundtable meetings and attorneys’ and social workers’ levels of accountability, in addition to scenes portraying the many bureaucracies meant to be handled by parents and essential services required for bettering their reunification prospects with their kids (Kickstarter, 2017).



Synopsis (summary)

How do we identify good parents?

How does an individual declared inept try to prove his/her potential to act responsibly?

Does America’s welfare structure wreck familial relationships in the name of child welfare? And,

If it does, how can kids be assured welfare whilst simultaneously ensuring the child-parent bond remains intact?

Does America’s welfare policy benefit broken families in any way?



Parents undergo trauma and feelings of devastation irrespective of their situation and whether or not they have erred. It is imperative to find a balance between a child’s overall welfare and parental rights. Citing weak excuses such as transport problems for denying child access to parents, altering appointment times and dates, or altogether cancelling appointments serves no good. It is wrong to leave child-parent reunification to welfare workers. It is imperative to wholly obey court orders that grant parents child-visiting rights. Further, there is, perhaps, a need to do away with the obligatory pre-meeting drug tests. To sum up, there is a strong need to aid child-parent reunification rather than…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

CASCW (2013). Center for Advanced Studies in Child Welfare, School of Social Work University of Minnesota. Retrieved 2, December, 2017, from https://cascw.umn.edu/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/CW360-Ambit_Winter2013.pdf

CASCW (2014). Trauma-Informed Child Welfare Practice (CW360°). Retrieved 2, December, 2017, from http://cascw.umn.edu/portfolio-items/winter-2013-cw360/

Kickstarter (2017). TOUGH LOVE a documentary about the child welfare system. Retrieved 2 December, 2017, from https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/28120610/tough-love-a-documentary-about-the-child-welfare-s

PBS Premiere (2015). Tough Love. Retrieved 2, December, 2017, from http://www.pbs.org/pov/toughlove/

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Resolving Problems Associated with Child Disparities in Minnesota

Pages: 4 (1664 words) Sources: 6 Subject: Sociology Document: #75148878

Multicultural Child Welfare Resources Paper: Child Welfare
The Native American and Latino Hispanic populations in Minnesota experience disparities that come externally from the child welfare system. Some of them include socioeconomic factors such as limited access to healthcare, education, and corrections, historical trauma for the families, discrimination, and prejudice when interacting with others (DHS, 2010).
The disparities experienced have forced child welfare systems to work in assuring that their experiences

Studyspark Study Document

Multicultural Counseling Is Color-Blind

Pages: 4 (1209 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Healthcare Document: #19968067

Multicultural Supervision CROSSING COLOR BARRIERS Ethical and Legal Concerns Section I of the ACA (2014) Code of Ethics on Resolving Ethical Issues mandates professional counselors to behave ethically and to obey the law. They are fully aware that client welfare and the trust enjoyed by their profession entirely depend on a high level of professional conduct on their part. They adhere faithfully to the ACA Code of Ethics and other applicable codes. They

Studyspark Study Document

Multicultural Studies Indeed, the Interests

Pages: 10 (3493 words) Sources: 5 Subject: Teaching Document: #41381912

One of the best examples of the mentality behind the development of the pedagogy of the oppressed, with regard to education is the evolution of the official restriction of curriculum to that which the African would need to survive in the economy of labor. A the solutions to the "poor Whites" problem, as was indicated in the Carnegie Commission of Inquiry into Poor Whites in South Africa in 1932, were

Studyspark Study Document

Diversity and or How Child Abuse in Handled in New York Compared to Other Countries...

Pages: 12 (3623 words) Sources: 12 Subject: Children Document: #45470755

Diversity and Child Abuse Prevention Diversity and How Child Abuse in Handled in New York Compared to Other Countries There is developing debate regarding the suitable combination of programs and polices needed to react to concerns of child abuse and neglect. Child neglect and abuse hold significant effects for prospective health and mental health of a child. As a result, it is imperative to comprehend connections among different forms of maltreatment, family

Studyspark Study Document

Signs of Safety Practice Model Critical Analysis

Pages: 7 (1761 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Children Document: #68429747

Signs of Safety Practice Model Critical Analysis Practice Model Read Signs Safety text (Turnell, A. & Edwards, S. (1999). Signs safety: a solution safety oriented approach child protection. New York W.W. Norton. ) learn Signs Safety practice model, heavily relied Minnesota child welfare practice community. The Signs of Safety child protection practice model was adopted as a policy to create better outcomes for vulnerable children. The purpose of the model was to

Studyspark Study Document

Parenting Program for Women and

Pages: 150 (41621 words) Sources: 64 Subject: Children Document: #12171638

There are many of these individuals, and it is time that this is changed.

Parents often look away from these kinds of problems, or they spend their time in denial of the issue because they feel that their child will not be harmed by parental involvement with drugs or alcohol. Some parents have parents that were/are addicts themselves, and some are so busy with their lives that they

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".