Child Welfare Services in a Public Agency: A Study of Ten Closed Cases of Families of Children Who Were in Placement, Five in Institutions, Five in Boarding Homes Showing the Interagency Action Involved in Their Discharge by the Bureau of Child Welfare's Division of Undercare, 1963

Edwin De Jesus, Fordham University

Abstract

Background of the Study. The child care problem in America is extreme, severe and probably not temporary. In our society almost six out of every one-hundred live babies are known to be out-of-wedlock with rates higher in many cities. Many times marriages are based on premarital pregnancy with the partners not really interested or capable of establishing permanent ties. Furthermore, a large proportion of our population is always on the move creating for themselves problems typical of the uprooted, away from family, relatives and primary group supports. In addition we are faced with the fact that nearly one-third of all women with children under eighteen years of age are in the labor market and that almost 400,000 children under twelve and 138,000 under ten years of age must care for themselves while their mothers work. Many of these children, with no one to become responsible for them become on many occasions the wards of public and private child caring agencies.

Subject Area

Social studies education|Individual & family studies|Social work

Recommended Citation

De Jesus, Edwin, "Child Welfare Services in a Public Agency: A Study of Ten Closed Cases of Families of Children Who Were in Placement, Five in Institutions, Five in Boarding Homes Showing the Interagency Action Involved in Their Discharge by the Bureau of Child Welfare's Division of Undercare, 1963" (1964). ETD Collection for Fordham University. AAI30670791.
https://research.library.fordham.edu/dissertations/AAI30670791

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