Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- Child welfare (4)
- Foster care (3)
- Law reform (2)
- Adolescent deliquency (1)
- Adolescent lawbreaking (1)
-
- Adolescents (1)
- Adoption (1)
- Adoption and Safe Families Act (1)
- Appointed counsel (1)
- Assault (1)
- California (1)
- Chaffee Act (1)
- Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (1)
- Child abuse (1)
- Child objections (1)
- Child preference (1)
- Child well-being statutes (1)
- Children (1)
- Commentary (1)
- Consent (1)
- Corporal punishment (1)
- Court proceedings (1)
- Domestic relations (1)
- Empirical studies (1)
- Exceptions (1)
- Harm (1)
- Iowa (1)
- Juvenile crime in Michigan (1)
- Juvenile justice reform (1)
- Michigan (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Juvenile Law
When Children Object: Amplifying An Older Child’S Objection To Termination Of Parental Rights, Brent Pattison
When Children Object: Amplifying An Older Child’S Objection To Termination Of Parental Rights, Brent Pattison
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
Each year, thousands of children become wards of the state when a court terminates the legal rights of their parents. Between 2010 and 2014, more than 307,000 children lost their legal relationships to their parents in Termination of Parental Rights (TPR) proceedings. A growing percentage of child welfare cases involve older children. At the same time, too many young people lose their legal relationships with their parents without a family waiting to adopt them. The stakes are high for children in TPR cases; nonetheless, many children—even older children—cannot meaningfully participate in proceedings. Moreover, TPR cases threaten parents’ and children’s rights …
Reforming (But Not Eliminating) The Parental Discipline Defense, Hazel Blum
Reforming (But Not Eliminating) The Parental Discipline Defense, Hazel Blum
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
This Note argues that although states should retain the parental discipline defense, their legislators should rewrite their statutes to limit the defense to a specific range of disciplinary methods that social science research has shown to have either net-beneficial or net-neutral effects on children. Part II explores religious and cultural attitudes about corporal punishment, including an overview of traditional American attitudes toward corporal punishment. Specifically, it explores how religious teachings, including Evangelical Christianity, Methodism, and Judaism, affect attitudes towards parental discipline. Additionally, Part II will examine the build-up to and aftermath of Sweden’s ban on corporal punishment—the first nation worldwide …
Easy Come, Easy Go: The Plight Of Children Who Spend Less Than 30 Days In Foster Care, Vivek Sankaran, Christopher Church
Easy Come, Easy Go: The Plight Of Children Who Spend Less Than 30 Days In Foster Care, Vivek Sankaran, Christopher Church
Articles
This article explores the plight of “short stayers” and argues that juvenile courts are failing to use two tools—the federal reasonable efforts requirement and the early appointment of parents’ counsel—to prevent the unnecessary entry of children into foster care. The article also argues that states should give parents and children the right to an expedited appeal of removal decisions to ensure removal standards are properly applied. Finally, this article argues that the federal government must acknowledge the problem of short stayers by utilizing data related to children who may unnecessarily enter foster care in the Child and Family Services Review, …
Federal Legislation Protecting Children And Providing For Their Well-Being, Frank E. Vandervort
Federal Legislation Protecting Children And Providing For Their Well-Being, Frank E. Vandervort
Book Chapters
Over the past several decades a national model for child welfare practice has emerged. In Child Welfare Law and Practice, also known as "The Red Book", experienced NACC authors and child welfare advocates have captured and refined that model, offering a comprehensive guide for those who make child welfare advocacy their priority. Designed as a study guide for attorneys preparing to take the NACC Child Welfare Law Certification Exam, the Red Book serves as a day-to-day guide for child welfare advocates across the country, offering in-depth analysis and instruction on wide variety of topics in the field of child welfare …
Juvenile Justice Reform And The Myth Of The Superpredator, Frank E. Vandervort
Juvenile Justice Reform And The Myth Of The Superpredator, Frank E. Vandervort
Other Publications
In the 1980s and 1990s, driven to a moral panic by a sudden escalation in juvenile homicide rates, Michigan lawmakers enacted tougher laws with the intention of cracking down on all juvenile crime. That was the era of the “superpredator” (a term that has recently resurfaced in the presidential contest), a term coined by John Dilulio ,a Princeton professor who later became the Director of Faith Based Initiatives in George W. Bush’s administration, and was spread far and wide by a number of self-serving reform advocates who predicted an onslaught of psychopathic juvenile predators.
Here in Michigan, then-Governor John Engler …