Understanding key barriers to fathers' case planning involvement
Publication
, Journal Article
Coakley, TM; Shears, JK; Randolph, SD
Published in: Child & Youth Services
Fathers who are uninvolved or play minimal roles in their children's lives may unwittingly have adverse effects on their psychosocial development. In 2003, only 54% of nearly a half million children in foster care in the United States had contact with their fathers, compared to 72% of children from the general population. There are multiple, complex personal, familial, societal, and agency barriers that limit fathers' involvement with their children. We provide recommendations for child welfare agencies to modify their policies to be equitable and financially helpful to fathers, and engage fathers in case planning about their children's safety, well-being and permanency.
Duke Scholars
Published In
Child & Youth Services
ISSN
1545-2298
Volume
35
Issue
4
Start / End Page
343 / 364
Related Subject Headings
- 4409 Social work
- 1117 Public Health and Health Services
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Coakley, T. M., Shears, J. K., & Randolph, S. D. (n.d.). Understanding key barriers to fathers' case planning involvement. Child & Youth Services, 35(4), 343–364.
Coakley, T. M., J. K. Shears, and S. D. Randolph. “Understanding key barriers to fathers' case planning involvement.” Child & Youth Services 35, no. 4 (n.d.): 343–64.
Coakley TM, Shears JK, Randolph SD. Understanding key barriers to fathers' case planning involvement. Child & Youth Services. 35(4):343–64.
Coakley, T. M., et al. “Understanding key barriers to fathers' case planning involvement.” Child & Youth Services, vol. 35, no. 4, pp. 343–64.
Coakley TM, Shears JK, Randolph SD. Understanding key barriers to fathers' case planning involvement. Child & Youth Services. 35(4):343–364.
Published In
Child & Youth Services
ISSN
1545-2298
Volume
35
Issue
4
Start / End Page
343 / 364
Related Subject Headings
- 4409 Social work
- 1117 Public Health and Health Services