Child Protection and Child Outcomes: Measuring the Effects of Foster Care
Author(s) -
Joseph Doyle
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
american economic review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 16.936
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1944-7981
pISSN - 0002-8282
DOI - 10.1257/aer.97.5.1583
Subject(s) - juvenile delinquency , foster care , instrumental variable , margin (machine learning) , interpretation (philosophy) , psychology , developmental psychology , child care , economics , demographic economics , medicine , econometrics , nursing , computer science , machine learning , programming language
Little is known about the effects of placing children who are abused or neglected into foster care. This paper uses the placement tendency of child protection investigators as an instrumental variable to identify causal effects of foster care on long-term outcomes--including juvenile delinquency, teen motherhood, and employment--among children in Illinois where a rotational assignment process effectively randomizes families to investigators. Large marginal treatment effect estimates suggest caution in the interpretation, but the results suggest that children on the margin of placement tend to have better outcomes when they remain at home, especially older children.
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