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Special Section: Promoting Racial Equity in Child Welfare

It is not a broken system, it is a system that needs to be broken: the upEND movement to abolish the child welfare system

, , , , &
Pages 500-517
Received 20 Aug 2020
Accepted 20 Aug 2020
Published online: 06 Sep 2020

ABSTRACT

The child welfare system disproportionately harms Black children and families through systemic over-surveillance, over-involvement, and the resulting adverse outcomes associated with foster care. Ending this harm will only be achieved when the forcible surveillance and separation of children from their parents is no longer viewed as an acceptable form of intervention. This paper describes the upEND movement, a collaborative movement aimed at abolishing the child welfare system as we know it and reimagining how we as a society support child, family, and community safety and well-being.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Alan J. Dettlaff

Alan J. Dettlaff is Dean and Maconda Brown O'Connor Endowed Dean's Chair at the Graduate College of Social Work, University of Houston.

Kristen Weber

Kristen Weber is Director of Equity, Inclusion, and Justice at the Center for the Study of Social Policy.

Maya Pendleton

Maya Pendleton is a Policy Analyst at the Center for the Study of Social Policy. 

Reiko Boyd

Reiko Boyd is Assistant Professor at the Graduate College of Social Work, University of Houston.

Bill Bettencourt

Bill Bettencourt is a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Social Policy.

Leonard Burton

Leonard Burton is a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Social Policy.
 

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