Wednesday, June 5, 2019
Working in the childs best interests
Working in the childs best interestsThe Childs Best provokeI did everything they asked me (Bergner, 2006). Abiding by the rules did not by any means help Marie get her children back from estate custody. Children ar one of the most open populations so when they are put in situations that abide harm them, the state will get involved. The child offbeat system bases decisions on whats in favor of the childs best interest. In Maries case, her mother wasnt capable of helping to care for the children while she recovered so the state had to take control. She was too unfit to be their mother. The child welfare system is a structured way of dealing with this vulnerable population by means of the idea of parens patriae and the Adoption and risk-free Families Act of 1997 that relates to termination of bring upal rights (TPR). When the well-being of children is overlooked, the policies that encompass the child welfare system will be enforced.Parens patriae is the doctrine that empowers political science institutions to venture into the intimate realm of child-rearing and effectively deputizes social workers to knock on the doors of family homes and gain entry (Bergner, 2006). Under this doctrine, any state worker had the right to place Maries home at any time if they had probable cause to investigate a situation involving children. This government policy came into effect because it literally translates to parent of the country (Bergner, 2006). Parens patriae didnt start off as what it means in todays society. Back in the days, children were seen in a different light. They were seen as laborers and not as innocent, helpless individuals who need a voice when faced with unwanted obstacles (Hatcher, 2012, p. 163). The idea that the state is the guardian of these helpless children where state officials, more specifically social workers could assume the roles that a guardian possesses was the real motivation. The societal value behind this policy was that the states we re finally recognizing that children had rights that needed to be protected and served (Hatcher, 2012, p.165). In Maries case, parens patriae responded to her needs. The social workers did everything in their power to help her get her children back, but it just wasnt enough. The parens patriae doctrine acknowledging children with rights that need to be tended to paved way for the Adoption and dependable Families Act of 1997. The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 became a policy that plays an important role in the child welfare system because it allows for children to get out of the promote care system and achieve permanent placement, whether through reunification or adoption (Halloran, 2014, p. 53). The act links federal money to states efforts to move children toward adoption by and by they have been in temporary care for 15 of any 22 months (Bergner, 2006). The societal value that led to this policy was catering to the childrens well-being. Children are seen as a worthy ca tegory that needs the help they can get when put in situations that are at no fault of their own. This act was created to preserve children from lingering in foster care (Halloran, 2014, p.57) until they were the legal age of 18 where they would technically be able to fend for themselves as adults. Termination of parental is a component to the child welfare system that basically ends legal rights of biological parents to children they have lost to the system. Termination criteria lie along a continuous measure where a courts determination of the conditions that justify the termination of parental rights is in degrees of objectivity and subjectivity (Halloran, 2014, p. 61). In other words, parents go through an evaluation to determine if they are fit or unfit before termination of parental rights occurs. The Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 led way to the termination of parental rights. The policies of parens patriae, the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997 and termination of parental are all valid policies that respond to the needs of the recipients if the outcomes are in favor of the parents. When things are good and parents prove that they can take care of their children, the policies have no faults to them. The minute the outcomes are not in favor of the parents, the policies do not tend to the needs of the recipients. Overall, there are many pros and cons to these policies. To say that these policies are followed thoroughly and fairly is an understatement. Decisions regarding whether these policies are followed are examined case by case. Each case has their own unique circumstances which in turn will have different results.Policies are put into place so that the results yield the best outcomes. In the child welfare system the principal(prenominal) cultivation is to tend to what is in favor of the childs interest. Its the reoccurring theme behind the child welfare system. When you have a case equal Marie, where she is doing everything in her p ower to become this fit mother the policies are not in the best interest for the recipient. Separating mother and child is not a goal in the policies but that is what happened in her case. To fully understand where judgments and decisions are made, one must take into perspective the social control that is behind the social welfare system. Its all about constructing policies based on what is right and what is wrong. Whats right to one person may not be right to some other and whats wrong to one person can be perceived as not wrong to another. No matter what, government intervention in the child welfare system is something that will always be a part of the system.ReferencesBergner,D. (2006, July 23). The Case of Marie and Her Sons New York Times. Retrieved from http//www.nytimes.com/2006/07/23/magazine/23welfare.html?pagewanted=all_r=0Halloran,J.T. (2014). Families First Reframing paternal Rights as Familial Rights in Termination of Parental Rights Proceedings. U.C. Davis Journal of Juvenile Law and Policy, 18(1), 51-93. Retrieved from http//heinonline.org.ezproxy.lib.uwm.edu/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/ucdajujlp18div=6collection=journalsset_as_cursor=0men_tab=srchresultsterms=18U.C.DavisJ.Juv.L.PolHatcher,D.L. (2012). Purpose vs. Power Parens Patriae and manner Self-Interest. New Mexico Law Review, 42(1), 159-202. Retrieved from http//heinonline.org.ezproxy.lib.uwm.edu/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/nmlr42div=9collection=journalsset_as_cursor=0men_tab=srchresultsterms=parenspatriaeimportancetype=matchall
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