1.
What
problem will your brief address?
Our response to
neglected or abused children, specifically in relation to foster care policy
2.
Who
is the audience?
Systems involved in
foster care placement (Judges, attorneys, child protective workers, mental
health providers)
Why
is the problem important to them?
Children finding safe
permanency in a timely fashion is crucial to their overall mental health and well-being. This not only impacts our country’s children,
but streamlining the way we assess and think about permanency ultimately saves
money, as children won’t be in foster care placements as long, which is
expensive.
What
do you know about the audience (e.g., technical knowledge, political or
organizational
culture or constraints, exposure to the issue, potential openness to the
message)?
I know that the various
players are typically each coming from very different perspectives. Judges and attorneys often don’t recognize
the sensitive and traumatic experiences of children and families that come
through the foster care system.
Sometimes even child protective workers are numb or insensitive to this
issue and make biased decisions that are not in the best interest of the
child. By creating policies that help
everyone involved to have the same focus and goals, children will be at the
center and better cared for in difficult situations.
3.
What other policy or issue briefs already exist? How will your brief differ
(e.g., different
information,
perspective, aim, or audience)?
Current briefs I’ve
found focus mainly on outcomes of foster care placement, where I intend my
brief to focus on the ways our systems interact to result in permanency faster
and in a more child-focused trauma informed way.