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Essay about The Psychology behind Keeping or Losing Parental Rights

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In 1997, the Adoption and Safe Families Act was passed to specifically address the health and welfare of foster children. It established strict time lines for children to be returned to their parents, or terminate parental rights so children could be adopted. In cases of sexual and chronic physical abuse, the ASFA authorized states to dispense with efforts to reunify the family and move directly to termination of parental rights (Myers, 2006, p. 102). In summary, the many advances in the child welfare protections suggest an evolving recognition of the special protections that children need and require. “From the colonial period well into the 19th century, childhood was not considered a special phase of human development. For the most …show more content…

It is therefore not surprising that in many situations the concept of “sparing the rod and spoiling the child” has been passed down generationally, sometimes to the point where abuse is an end result (Crosson-Tower, 2010). The child protection movement had a peculiar start as it evolved out the animal protection movement organized by Henry Bergh, who had gained attention from the community leaders of New York while tending to mistreated animals (Watkin, 1990). In 1874, the beatings and repeated maltreatment of a young girl by the name of Mary Ellen Wilson was brought to the attention of a church worker named Etta Wheeler (Watkin, 1990). Ms. Wheeler pleaded with both Henry Bergh and attorney Elbridge Gerry to prosecute the stepmother (Mrs. Mary Connelly) for abusing the child (Watkin, 1990). Mrs. Connelly was eventually sentenced to a year of prison labor, and Mary Ellen was removed from the home and placed in the care of Sally Angell, the mother of Etta Wheeler. This effort to rescue one child was the impetus for the formation of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (SPCC), and in 1875. The New York Office of the SPCC was established by Elbridge Gerry and quickly spread to Philadelphia and Chicago (Crosson-Tower, 2010). Throughout the early 20th century, advocates for the protection of children established Children’s Bureau and the Child Welfare League of America (CWLA), but its activity was slowed as a result of World War I

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