New From CCF! What’s the Role of Child Protective Services? New Study Points to Parallels with Policing
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Virginia Rutter / Framingham State Sociology
vrutter@gmail.com
What’s the Role of Child Protective Services? New Study Points to Parallels with Policing
Each year, U.S. child protection authorities, tasked with responding to child abuse and neglect, investigate the families of over three million children, disproportionately poor, Black, and Native American children. A staggering one in three children can expect a CPS investigation at some point during childhood.In a new study, sociologist Kelley Fong finds that professionals frequently refer families to Child Protective Services to get them help. But because CPS is a coercive institution,not a social service one, this often undermines families in marginalized communities.
August 11, 2020, Austin TX—Despite its goal of protecting children, Child Protective Services (CPS) has some troubling features in common with policing in the United States. That’s the conclusion of “The Tool We Have”: Why Child Protective Services Investigates So Many Families and How Even Good Intentions Backfire, released today by the Council on Contemporary Families. Kelley Fong, an assistant professor in Georgia Tech’s School of History and Sociology, explains “how, with the fraying of the social safety net in recent decades, efforts to help families take the form of summoning an agency that can forcibly separate them.” Dr. Fong notes, “As with the police, this expansive reliance on authorities with coercive power fosters fear and mistrust” — even when CPS finds parents are not maltreating.
The data: Interviews with people who refer families to the CPS, CPS investigators, and the moms who were investigated. To understand why CPS encounters are so commonplace, especially for marginalized families, Dr. Fong observed CPS investigations in Connecticut and interviewed approximately 100 key participants on these cases: professionals reporting suspected child maltreatment or neglect, frontline investigators, and investigated mothers. Many reporting professionals understand that CPS may not be appropriate but feel it is the only “tool we have.” As a result, referring to CPS —like calling the police — becomes a kind of catch-all reaction to non-criminal problems, in this case to get support services for families in need:
Reporting professionals almost always want CPS to provide supportive services, reasoning that CPS has more information about available and appropriate services. But CPS investigators, like reporting professionals, are often unable to address families’ persistent needs, and the fact that they come in with the power to remove children puts marginalized families in a legal but also a psychological vise.
Embracing CPS reporting as a means of rehabilitating families disproportionately exposes marginalized families to CPS’s coercive authority, and, paradoxically, that leads to less help and more mistrust.
Moms: “I was so scared.” Fong’s interviews with investigated mothers reveal the heart of the drama that can unfold with CPS.
CPS investigations foster substantial anxiety among investigated families. In these investigations the threat of removal is ever-present–even if unstated. “I couldn’t speak. The only thing that crossed my mind was that they were going to take them away,” recalled one mother. “I always thought that their job is to come in and take a child from their family,” another reflected. “Oh my God. You don’t understand. I was so scared.”
CPS reports can also lead parents to distance themselves from reporting systems. One mother, reported to CPS for using marijuana during pregnancy, hesitated to speak openly with healthcare providers afterwards. After giving birth, she worried she was experiencing postpartum depression. But, she explained, “I don’t tell them any of that because I don’t need them to say, oh, she’s going through postpartum. She’s gonna hurt the baby.”
Where this leads: “In asking CPS—like the police, armed with tools of surveillance and coercion—to take on all manner of social problems, we further traumatize and marginalize families,” Fong explains. She argues that changes in training and development of support-oriented crisis response teams would be better aligned with many of the family needs that are often handed off to CPS.
When you see the fist, you panic. Stephanie Coontz, CCF’s Director of Research, observes: “Fong’s CPS findings parallel what happens when we ask police to respond to problems that social workers should be dealing with. In both cases, people who’ve been trained to coerce and punish bad actors are asked to get needy people out of bad situations. We tell people wearing a gauntleted fist to extend a helping hand. They aren’t trained to do that, and even when they try, many people only see the fist and they panic.”
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
Kelley Fong, Assistant Professor, School of History and Sociology, Georgia Institute
of Technology; ktfong@gatech.edu.
LINKS:
Brief report: “The Tool We Have”: Why Child Protective Services Investigates So Many Families and
How Even Good Intentions Backfire
Preprint of underlying new study: https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/kfong/files/fong_asr.pdf
Categories
- Children and Adolescents
- Child Welfare
- Division of Labor in Families
- Economic Inequality
- Family Caregiving
- Family Counseling and Therapy
- History and Trends on Gender
- History and Trends on Marriage and Family Life
- Labor and Workforce
- Parenthood
- Public Policy
- Race and Ethnicity
- Trauma and Disaster
- Work and Family
Featured Posts
Blog Archive
- October 2025 (3)
- August 2025 (1)
- April 2025 (1)
- March 2025 (9)
- February 2025 (1)
- September 2024 (1)
- May 2024 (4)
- January 2024 (1)
- November 2023 (9)
- May 2023 (3)
- April 2023 (3)
- December 2022 (1)
- October 2022 (1)
- June 2022 (2)
- April 2022 (2)
- March 2022 (1)
- February 2022 (1)
- November 2021 (1)
- September 2021 (1)
- April 2021 (1)
- March 2021 (1)
- January 2021 (1)
- December 2020 (1)
- October 2020 (1)
- September 2020 (2)
- August 2020 (5)
- July 2020 (5)
- June 2020 (2)
- May 2020 (4)
- March 2020 (3)
- February 2020 (2)
- January 2020 (2)
- October 2019 (2)
- September 2019 (9)
- May 2019 (1)
- February 2019 (1)
- May 2018 (2)
- April 2018 (1)
- February 2018 (1)
- November 2017 (1)
- September 2017 (1)
- June 2017 (1)
- March 2017 (1)
- December 2016 (1)
- November 2016 (1)
- September 2016 (2)
- July 2016 (2)
- June 2016 (5)
- May 2016 (2)
- April 2016 (1)
- March 2016 (6)
- February 2016 (7)
- January 2016 (4)
- December 2015 (1)
- November 2015 (5)
- October 2015 (3)
- September 2015 (2)
- August 2015 (2)
- July 2015 (2)
- June 2015 (2)
- May 2015 (1)
- April 2015 (10)
- March 2015 (3)
- February 2015 (3)
- January 2015 (3)
- December 2014 (1)
- October 2014 (4)
- September 2014 (2)
- July 2014 (5)
- May 2014 (1)
- March 2014 (4)
- January 2014 (6)
- December 2013 (4)
- September 2013 (1)
- August 2013 (3)
- June 2013 (12)
- May 2013 (4)
- April 2013 (1)
- March 2013 (2)
- February 2013 (10)
- August 2009 (1)
- January 2009 (1)