Addressing Disproportionality in Child Welfare and Juvenile Justice, Part 2
In Part 1 of this post, I talked about the need to have the child welfare and juvenile justice systems work together to more effectively reduce racial and ethnic disproportionality. I listed the five elements, or areas of practice and policy, that these two systems should address jointly to improve their results.
- Increasing Transparency
If done right, agency staff would modify their data systems to track kids known to both systems of care. The purpose would be to identify the full extent of the disproportionate representation of minority children and youth in these two systems, as well as those known to both systems, and make that information public to an oversight body charged with monitoring not just the extent of the disproportionality, but the success or failure in reducing it.
- Re-engineering Structures and Procedures
Once both systems have a common approach to reviewing key decision points in their respective systems, they have the opportunity to analyze how and if disparate treatment occurs at each point. If disproportionality is being exacerbated at a specific decision point, the data can be disaggregated to see if there’s something that can be changed to address the problem.
- Changing Organizational Culture
For agencies to be successful in addressing disproportionality, they need to be serious about providing training on the lack of equity in the two systems that this disproportionality reflects. In this regard, there needs to be a change in organizational culture across both child welfare and juvenile justice. In Texas, for example, both systems were jointly trained on “Undoing Racism” and are trying to address the disparate treatment that leads to disproportionality in a more comprehensive and coherent manner.
- Mobilizing Political Leadership
Leaders need to take a holistic approach to addressing the problem. In other words, they shouldn’t convene a conference on disproportionality in juvenile justice without talking about the same issue in child welfare, or the underrepresentation of kids of color in mental health and substance abuse treatment services. Furthermore, it’s important not to raise the issue as the “issue of the month,” but to do so on an ongoing basis throughout one’s leadership tenure. Disparate treatment and disproportionality are issues that require sustained and intensive focus. While much can be achieved through the type of strategies mentioned above that are focused on both system and decision point analyses, leaders must also attack societal issues that contribute to disproportionality, such as poverty, disadvantaged communities and dysfunctional schools.
- Partnering in Developing Family and Community Resources
This is the area in which there is perhaps the greatest opportunity for cross-system collaboration.Here are three ways the juvenile justice and child welfare systems can work together in this area:
- Develop, fund and implement family strengthening programs that can be used across the two systems, benefiting families within each system, as well as those known to both systems. This will help to create increased levels of cost and program efficiency and an enhanced resource for our most vulnerable families.
- “Family finder” software (mentioned in yesterday’s post [hyperlink]) has been used with success in child welfare to help locate the relatives with whom a child or youth can be placed (as opposed to putting him or her in foster care with non-relatives or in a group home). It could also be used in juvenile justice to create alternatives to detention; or develop enhanced supports and connections for youth as part of their aftercare plan as they reenter their community, school and home from institutional placement.
- The two systems should share responsibility for developing respite services for kinship, family foster care and group home providers who need relief from caring for children and youth who are acting out while in care. While these respite services have been used mostly in child welfare, they could be used in juvenile justice to avoid disrupting placements, violations of probation or the conditions of an alternative placement.
Shay Bilchik is the founder and Director of the Center for Juvenile Justice Reform at Georgetown University’s Public Policy Institute. The Center’s purpose is to focus the nation’s public agency leaders, across systems of care and levels of government, on the key components of a strong juvenile justice reform agenda.


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