Disentangling substantiation: The influence of race, income, and risk on the substantiation decision in child welfare |
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Authors: | Alan J. Dettlaff Stephanie L. Rivaux |
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Affiliation: | a University of Illinois at Chicago, Jane Addams College of Social Work, 1040 W. Harrison (MC 309), Chicago, IL 60607, Unites Statesb University of Texas at Austin, School of Social Work, 1 University Station D3500, Austin, TX 78712, United Statesc Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, 701 W. 51st Street, Austin, TX 78751, United Statesd Child Protection Research Center, American Humane Association, 63 Inverness Drive E., Englewood, CO 80112, United Statese University of Texas at Arlington, School of Social Work, 211 S. Cooper Street, Box 19129, Arlington, TX 76019, United Statesf Texas Health and Human Services Commission, Center for the Elimination of Disproportionality and Disparities, Brown-Heatly Building, 4900 N. Lamar Blvd., Austin, TX 78751-2316, United States |
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Abstract: | Understanding the source of disparities found at decision-making points along the child welfare pathway is essential to understanding and addressing the overrepresentation of African American children. Although research has documented the existence of disparities, it has been less successful in identifying the explanatory factors behind them. Critiques of research examining these disparities have suggested that poverty is likely a stronger explanatory factor than race, yet analyses that include measures of poverty using data from child welfare systems have largely not been conducted. This study uses data from the Texas child welfare system to identify the factors contributing to disparities at the substantiation decision. Given the relationship between poverty and child maltreatment, the analyses control for the effect of family income, as well as other factors related to maltreatment, to better understand the effect of race on this decision-making point. Findings indicate that when family income is controlled, race is not a significant factor in the substantiation decision. However, when also controlling for caseworker perceptions of risk, race emerges as the stronger explanatory factor. This suggests not only an important relationship between race, income, and risk assessment, but also that disproportionality in the child welfare system is a complex phenomenon that cannot be explained by a single factor. These results further demonstrate that the effect of racial bias on decision-making remains an important consideration in understanding the overrepresentation of African American children. |
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Keywords: | Disproportionality Disparities African Americans Child welfare Substantiation Decision-making |
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