1st Edition

A History of Child Welfare

By Lisa Merkel-Holguin Copyright 1996
    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    320 Pages
    by Routledge

    As we approach the year 2000, infant mortality rates, child placement dilemmas, and appropriate socialization of children continue to challenge the field of child welfare. It is thus especially significant to reflect on the history of child welfare. The carefully selected topics explored in this volume underscore the importance of recovering past events and themes still relevant. It is the aim of this volume to illumine current issues by a review of past struggles and problems.

    A History of Child Welfare offers many examples of practices that have direct import for those who struggle to support children. Who is not bothered by what seem to be increasing acts of violence by children against children? The role of hidden cruelty to children in perpetuating violence is illuminated by studying the past. Historians and social researchers have gone far in examining the family, and by implication, their revelations greatly increase society's complex responses to children over time from early assumptions that children were little more than miniature adults to the discovery of childhood as a special developmental period.

    At the start of this century women still did not have universal suffrage and brutal child labor was not unusual. Harsh legal codes separating the races were widespread, and those bent on improving the lot of children knew that reform meant commitment to an uphill struggle. By the end of the century, much has changed: child labor, while still present, has been outlawed in most industries, women vote and hold many high offices; and de jure racial segregation is largely a memory. Yet the state of children remains precarious, with poverty a persistent theme throughout the century.

    The fifteen articles in this volume cover a wide range of social conditions, public policies, and approaches to problem solving. Though history does not repeat itself precisely, problems, controversies about solutions, and certain themes do. A History of Child Welfare takes up social and economic conditions that correlate with increasing rates of child abuse and neglect, and an increasing number of children in out-of-home care. This volume distinguishes approaches that have been useful from those that have failed. In this way, these serious reflections help build on past successes and avoid previous errors.

    Introduction; 1: Child Welfare in Fiction and Fact; 2: The Dilemma in Saving Children from Child Labor: Reform and Casework at Odds with Families’ Needs (1900–1938); 3: The Child Welfare Response to Youth Violence and Homelessness in the Nineteenth Century; 4: An Outrage to Common Decency: Historical Perspectives on Child Neglect; 5: Rosie the Riveter and Her Latchkey Children: What Americans Can Learn About Child Day Care from the Second World War; 6: Bring Back the Orphanages? What Policymakers of Today Can Learn from the Past; 7: Janie Porter Barrett and the Virginia Industrial School for Colored Girls: Community Response to the Needs of African American Children; 8: From Indenture to Family Foster Care: A Brief History of Child Placing; 9: A History of Placing-Out: The Orphan Trains; 10: From Family Duty to Family Policy: The Evolution of Kinship Care; 11: Adoption and Disclosure of Family Information: A Historical Perspective; 12: From “Operation Brown Baby” to “Opportunity”: The Placement of Children of Color at the Boys and Girls Aid Society of Oregon; 13: Factors and Events Leading to the Passage of the Indian Child Welfare Act; 14: The Citizens’ Committee for Children of New York and the Evolution of Child Advocacy (1945-1972); 15: Information Sources on Child Welfare Archives: Howto Identify, Locate, and Use Them for Research

    Biography

    Lisa Merkel-Holguin