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MAY 2004 SPOTLIGHT:
FOREIGN-BORN CHILDREN IN FOSTER CARE:
HOW TO SERVE THIS SPECIAL POPULATION?
The number of
foreign-born residents in the U.S. has increased nearly threefold
since 1970
1. This increased diversity of American society impacts
all social service sectors, including the U.S. foster care system.
Taking into account a child’s culture of origin can greatly enhance
the quality and appropriateness of a child’s foster care placement.
Some specific needs of foreign-born children in foster care include
the following:
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Language
interpretation
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Immigration legal
services
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Cross-cultural
adjustment
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Ethnic and
religious identity
-
Coping with
separation and loss (of family, environment, social norms, etc.)
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Familiar food and
customs.
In addition,
foreign-born children in foster care need culturally competent
caseworkers and foster families. While these issues can be daunting
for a young person who is simultaneously dealing with the adjustment
to foster care, a child’s cross-cultural heritage can be an asset by
providing two cultures and traditions from which to draw on for
strength.
Refugee and immigrant children in foster care can easily be
overlooked, since they are usually minority populations in an
overburdened system of care. For this reason, BRYCS has focused in a
variety of ways on this intersection between immigration issues and
child welfare practice.
In July 2003, BRYCS hosted a roundtable meeting in Washington, DC
called “Foster Care at a Cultural Crossroads: Refugee Children in
the Public Foster Care System.” This first national gathering of its
kind utilized the BRYCS cross service training model and brought
together representatives from refugee communities, refugee-serving
organizations and the foster care system in order to develop
strategies for supporting refugee children in the care of local
child welfare agencies. One participant described the gathering as a
“dramatically important meeting.” A compilation of the presentation
and discussion notes, resources, case studies and participant
information has been published in a
BRYCS report, available upon
request.
A related BRYCS publication,
“Serving Foreign-Born Foster Children:
A Resource for Meeting the Special Needs of Refugee Youth and
Children” includes information on:
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Identifying and
assessing the needs of children eligible for refugee-oriented
services
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Developing
refugee foster families and permanency planning for refugee
children
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Governmental and
professional standards on linguistic and cultural competence
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A multi-service
description of the U.S. refugee serving system
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“Lessons learned”
from BRYCS’ technical assistance and from specialized refugee
foster care programs.
This publication
also includes information sheets for dissemination on the topics:
These information
sheets compile promising practices from foster care programs that
have specialized in the care of refugee children. BRYCS designed the
sheets to be copied and used as training or discussion materials.
The BRYCS Clearinghouse
also includes a variety of documents related to foreign-born children
and foster care. A recent addition to the Clearinghouse is a New
York Times article from March 28, 2004 titled “Children Alone
and Scared, Fighting Deportation.” This article, along with
other resources related to foreign-born children in foster care,
can be accessed through this
month’s featured search. The New York Times article discusses
a little-known legal provision called Special Immigration
Juvenile Status (SIJS)2,
which is available to: foreign-born children in need of long-term
foster care, who are under the jurisdiction of a juvenile court,
and for whom return to their country of origin is not in their best
interest. Additional information about SIJS can be located
through the Web-based manual of the Immigrant Legal Resource Center,
which can be found at
http://www.ilrc.org/pubdesc_output.php?id=10.
Many child welfare agencies seek to expand and diversify their pool
of foster parents, while also increasing the cultural competence
and sensitivity of existing foster families. Two additional resources
in the BRYCS clearinghouse can assist with these worthwhile efforts:
We hope that these varied resources will assist child welfare
providers and others working with foreign-born children to better
serve this vulnerable but growing population.
1 Schmidley, A. Dianne, U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population
Reports, Series P23-206, Profile of the Foreign-Born Population in
the United States: 2000, page 2 (U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, DC, 2001). Retrieved from http://www.census.gov/prod/2002pubs/p23-206.pdf
2 See page 5 of “Serving Foreign-Born Foster Children: A Resource
for Meeting the Special Needs of Refugee Youth and Children.”
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