S. Department of Health and Human Services launched the national Quality Improvement Center on Domestic Violence in Child Welfare (QIC - DVCW) to test interventions to improve
how child welfare agencies and their partners work with families experiencing domestic violence.
This bulletin is intended for child welfare agency leadership and explores
how child welfare agencies can support children who are victims of human trafficking, as well as children who are at greater risk for future victimization.
We're working to research, analyze, and identify best practices for improving
how child welfare agencies, domestic violence programs and other partners work collaboratively to improve outcomes for families experiencing domestic violence.
The QIC - DVCW is a five - year cooperative agreement between Futures Without Violence and the Department of Health and Human Services, Children's Bureau to generate and disseminate knowledge that will improve
how child welfare agencies and community organizations can work together to help families experiencing domestic violence.
Explores
how child welfare agencies can support children who are victims of human trafficking, as well as children who are at greater risk for future victimization.
Not exact matches
The report explains
how Project Achieve works and examines its long - term impact on the
children and families served by these
agencies, the people who work there and the city's
child welfare system itself.
«When I looked at those numbers I thought of
how vital it is that Canada moves with dispatch to comply with the four existing orders from the Human Rights Tribunal to end its discriminatory funding of First Nations
child welfare agencies across the country,» she said.
How can
child welfare agencies improve outcomes for
children and families?
The qualitative methods employed in this study have facilitated a collection of rich, detailed information not only about the overlap between the literature and practitioners» perspectives, but also about
how and why the phenomenon occurs and what
child welfare agencies are doing to address the issue.
Improving Outcomes Together: Court and
Child Welfare Collaboration (PDF - 280 KB) Fiermonte & Sidote Salyers (2005) How juvenile and family courts and child welfare agencies share information and collaborate outside the courtroom to improve outcomes for children in
Child Welfare Collaboration (PDF - 280 KB) Fiermonte & Sidote Salyers (2005)
How juvenile and family courts and
child welfare agencies share information and collaborate outside the courtroom to improve outcomes for children in
child welfare agencies share information and collaborate outside the courtroom to improve outcomes for
children in care.
How to Work with Your Court: A Guide for Child Welfare Agency Administrators ABA Center on Children and the Law (2004) View Abstract Explains how child welfare administrators can establish effective and efficient relationships between their agencies and the cour
How to Work with Your Court: A Guide for
Child Welfare Agency Administrators ABA Center on Children and the Law (2004) View Abstract Explains how child welfare administrators can establish effective and efficient relationships between their agencies and the co
Child Welfare Agency Administrators ABA Center on
Children and the Law (2004) View Abstract Explains
how child welfare administrators can establish effective and efficient relationships between their agencies and the cour
how child welfare administrators can establish effective and efficient relationships between their agencies and the co
child welfare administrators can establish effective and efficient relationships between their
agencies and the courts.
The article explores the challenges facing
child welfare agencies in engaging parents, suggests
how multidisciplinary parent representation can assist them in reaching their goals, and encourages
child welfare agencies to prioritize strengthening parent representation in their jurisdictions.
How can the
child welfare agency increase foster placement options, so
children can be stably placed close to their school of origin (i.e., partnering with schools and community
agencies in foster parent recruitment and wraparound services to help maintain placements)?
How can state and local
child welfare agencies ensure that Title IV - E foster care maintenance payments and administrative funds are used for school of origin transportation?
Child welfare agencies are so accustomed to the way office - based visits have always been done that it is difficult to see
how — unintentionally — visit practices alienate parents,
children and foster parents.
Culture and Health Literacy: Tools for Cross-Cultural Communication and Language Access Can Help Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2017) Describes
how organizations, including
child welfare agencies working with kinship families, can increase communication effectiveness when they recognize and work to bridge cultural differences that may contribute to miscommunication.