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The Surveillance Tentacles of the Child Welfare System
Author(s) -
Charlotte Baughman,
Tehra Coles,
Jennifer Feinberg,
Hope Newton
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
columbia journal of race and law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2155-2401
DOI - 10.52214/cjrl.v11i3.8743
Subject(s) - harm , welfare system , welfare , service system , social welfare , criminology , inequality , family preservation , community service , service (business) , social work , service provider , business , public relations , political science , sociology , law , marketing , mathematical analysis , mathematics
The family regulation system identifies families through the use of widespread, cross-system surveillance for the purported purpose of keeping children safe. But the system does not surveil all families equally, leading to the disproportionate impact of family regulation on Black, Brown, and Native families, and fails to protect while causing more harm to children and communities of color. We examine how institutions and professionals that are meant to provide necessary services to the community—medical providers, social services agencies, the police, and schools—act as tentacles of surveillance, entrapping families in the family regulation system. We argue that engineering service and community providers as surveillance agents perpetuates inequality and leads to unnecessary family separation and trauma, and that genuine support for families can only thrive outside of the family regulation system and its surveillance tentacles. 

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