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Racial Disproportionality and Disparity: An examination of California’s Child Welfare System

Racial Disproportionality and Disparity: An examination of California’s Child Welfare System. Emily Putnam-Hornstein, MSW Center for Social Services Research University of California at Berkeley Presented at the CalSWEC Student Day Conference April 17, 2009 Berkeley, California

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Racial Disproportionality and Disparity: An examination of California’s Child Welfare System

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  1. Racial Disproportionality and Disparity:An examination of California’s Child Welfare System Emily Putnam-Hornstein, MSW Center for Social Services Research University of California at Berkeley Presented at the CalSWEC Student Day Conference April 17, 2009 Berkeley, California The Performance Indicators Project is a collaboration of the California Department of Social Services and the University of California at Berkeley, and is supported by the California Department of Social Services and the Stuart Foundation

  2. Overview • What? (what defines disproportionality and disparity?) • Who? (who is disproportionately represented?) • Where? (where is disproportionality observed?) • When? (when do disparities arise?) • How? (how is disparity being addressed?) • Why?(why do disparities exist?) • What? • Who? • Where? • When? • How? • Why?

  3. What defines disproportionality? disparity? • disproportionality: a descriptive measure of the degree to which a group makes up a proportion that is higher or lower than that group’s proportion in some larger population • disparity: a comparison of one group to another group, a relative rate or relative risk measure (Shaw, et. al., 2008)

  4. disproportionality disparity white white black black % % Ratio % % % %

  5. Who is disproportionately represented? Black Rates per 1,000 White Rates per 1,000 Hispanic Rates per 1,000 Asian/PI Rates per 1,000

  6. Where is disproportionality observed?

  7. 2007California:Ethnicity and Path through the Child Welfare System (Missing Values & Other Race Excluded from % Calculations, <18 years of Age)

  8. 2007California:Ethnicity and Path through the Child Welfare System (Missing Values & Other Race Excluded from % Calculations, <18 years of Age)

  9. 2007California:Ethnicity and Path through the Child Welfare System (Missing Values & Other Race Excluded from % Calculations, <18 years of Age)

  10. 2007California:Ethnicity and Path through the Child Welfare System (Missing Values & Other Race Excluded from % Calculations, <18 years of Age)

  11. 2007California:Ethnicity and Path through the Child Welfare System (Missing Values & Other Race Excluded from % Calculations, <18 years of Age)

  12. 2007California:Ethnicity and Path through the Child Welfare System (Missing Values & Other Race Excluded from % Calculations, <18 years of Age) *includes children age 18

  13. The racial disproportionality at each decision point manifests in group disparities (since every time one group is overrepresented, another group must be underrepresented). Since “in care” is not a decision point, the disparity observed in the population of children in foster care must be a function of disparities observed in entries relative to exits When do disparities arise? entries in care population exits

  14. 2000-2007California:Allegation Rates per 1,000 by Ethnicity

  15. 2000-2007California:Substantiation Rates per 1,000 by Ethnicity

  16. 2000-2007California:Entry Rates per 1,000 by Ethnicity

  17. 2000-2007California:In Care Rates per 1,000 by Ethnicity

  18. 2000-2007California:Exit Rates per 10,000 by Ethnicityages 0-20

  19. How is disparity being addressed? • Cultural trainings to reduce bias and sensitize workers (45 states had in place as of 2007) • Infusion of funding and technical assistance from the Casey-CSSP Alliance for Racial Equity at the State and local level • Family and community involvement Nationally California • California Disproportionality Project • Standing Committee on Disproportionality (Fresno County) • Cultural sensitivity trainings • Celebration of staff culture/diversity • Team Decision Making • Cultural Brokers

  20. “Major factors affecting children’s entry into foster care included African American families’ higher rates of poverty, families’ difficulties in accessing support services so that they can provide a safe home for vulnerable children and prevent their removal, and racial bias and cultural misunderstanding among child welfare decision makers.” (GAO, 2007) Why do disparities exist? risk resources race ? ? ?

  21. 2000 July-December First Entries California: Percent Exited to Permanency 84 Months From Entry 81% 90%

  22. (And why do we need to understand the sources?) • Research has not yet decomposed the relative contributions of bias, resources, risk, and context • No easy task…empirical work focuses (by necessity) on only those children who have contact with child protective services (and the factors that are associated with their contact) • We don’t know the “true” incidence of child abuse and neglect (notwithstanding the NIS) • We don’t know if those who have contact amount to a representative or a biased sample of the full population of children subjected to maltreatment • Yet these hold important implications for how and where we intervene to reduce/eliminate disparities…as well as what our expectations should be

  23. Emily Putnam-Hornstein eputnamhornstein@berkeley.edu Barbara Needell bneedell@berkeley.edu CSSR.BERKELEY.EDU/UCB_CHILDWELFARE Needell, B., Webster, D., Armijo, M., Lee, S., Dawson, W., Magruder, J., Exel, M., Glasser, T., Williams, D., Zimmerman, K., Simon, V., Putnam-Hornstein, E., Frerer, K., Cuccaro-Alamin, S., Winn, A., Lou, C., & Peng, C. (2009). Child Welfare Services Reports for California. Retrieved April 1, 2009, from University of California at Berkeley Center for Social Services Research website. URL: <http://cssr.berkeley.edu/ucb_childwelfare> Presentation Developed by Emily Putnam-Hornstein and Christine Wei-Mien Lou

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