A Three-Pronged Approach to Addressing Racial Disproportionality and Disparities in Child Welfare: The Santa Clara Count

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A Three-Pronged Approach to Addressing Racial Disproportionality and Disparities in Child Welfare: The Santa Clara County Example of Leadership, Collaboration and Data-Driven Decisions Crystal Soderman Duarte • Alicia Summers

Published online: 30 August 2012 Ó Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2012

Abstract Disproportionality and disparities in the treatment of children of color has been a growing concern in the child welfare system. System stakeholders have begun to recognize the problem through data, which help identify discrepancies within their jurisdictions. Nationally, the primary concern is the overrepresentation of African American children within the child welfare system, where African Americans represent proportions of the foster population at a level more than twice as high as they are represented in the community at large. In some jurisdictions, however, this is only one piece of the disproportionality concern. San Jose, for example, has both an overrepresentation of African American and an overrepresentation of Hispanic children in the child welfare system. Because San Jose’s child welfare population is unique, they have had to take a unique approach to addressing these concerns. This article outlines strategies and tools used to begin reducing disproportionality within the child welfare and juvenile dependency court system, using San Jose’s experience as an example. Some of the key approaches to addressing disproportionality include ensuring a systems approach (creating a Cross Agency Systems Team that prioritizes services for parents and children in various systems, e.g., mental health, substance abuse, etc.); addressing disproportionality from multiple perspectives and examining the roles’ of caseworkers, supervisors, service providers, judges, and attorneys; gaining community and system stakeholder buy-in by maintaining momentum and providing opportunities for dialogue about the complex issues facing families of color; using a data-driven approach to inform ongoing initiatives and changes in policy and practice (e.g., closely examining policies and practices such as the frequency of recommendations to by-pass reunification services); and implementing changes in practice at multiple levels

C. S. Duarte (&)  A. Summers National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, Reno, NV, USA e-mail: [email protected]

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C. S. Duarte, A. Summers

including child welfare and on the bench. The examination of San Jose’s approach reveals challenges, successes, and lessons learned. Keywords Disproportionality  Disparity  Child welfare  Courts  Dependency  Collaboration  Leadership  Data

For more than a decade, there has been increased awareness that children of color are disproportionally represented and experience disparate outcomes in the child welfare system. Disproportionality occurs when a particular racial or ethnic group is represented within a social system at a rate or percentage that is not proportionate to their representation in the general population. While not a new phenomeno