Parental Rights – Analysis by Article of the UNCRC – Part 1 of 9
May 25, 2009 at 4:23 pm
Last year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the
impact of ratification of the
United Nations Convention on Rights of the
Child (UNCRC) would have on Parental Rights and Children’s Rights in the
United States.
Here is that analysis:
Article 3: The “Best Interest” Principle
It’s usually looked upon as a positive means of holding countries
accountable to protect children. But the United Nations Convention on the
Rights of the Child (UNCRC) is so much more than that.
When the UNCRC was brought up for ratification in 1995, the core group of
Senators in opposition concluded that this treaty marked a significant
departure from the originally constituted relationship between state and
child. They found, in fact, that it was literally incompatible with the right
of parents to raise their children as well as a wholesale giveaway of U.S.
sovereignty.
But why?
Widespread concerns about the UNCRC stem from the treaty’s repeated
emphasis on one key principle used to guide all decisions affecting children:
consideration of the “best interests of the child.” This
principle underlies all of the rights found in the Convention.
Article 3 of the CRC provides that “in all actions concerning
children, whether undertaken by public or private social welfare institutions,
courts of law, administrative authorities or legislative bodies, the best
interests of the child shall be a primary consideration.”
In other words, policies affecting children at all levels of society and
government should have the child’s best interest as the primary concern.
The trouble occurs when this principle appears as a guiding
principle for parents in article 18(1), which states that “Parents
or, as the case may be, legal guardians, have the primary responsibility for
the upbringing and development of the child. The best interests of the child
will be their basic concern.”
Who knows best?
The Convention’s emphasis on the “best interests” principle is a
sharp break from American law.
In the 1993 case of Reno v. Flores, the U.S. Supreme Court
held that “the ‘best interests of the child’ is not the legal
standard that governs parents’ or guardians’ exercise of their custody.”
In the 2000 case of Troxel v. Granville, the Court struck
down a grandparent visitation statute because
decisions about the child were made “solely on the judge’s
determination of the child’s best interests,” without regard to
the wishes of the parent.
The Court’s decisions in Reno and Troxel reflect a
fundamental tenet of American family law, which recognizes that parents
typically act in the best interests of their children. Indeed, “United
States case law is replete with examples of parents fighting for the best
interests of their children,” ranging from a child’s right to an
education to the right of personal injury compensation. Except in cases where
a parent has been proven to be “unfit,” American law presumes that the
parent is acting in the best interests of the child, and defers to that
parent’s decision.
The UNCRC’s Brave New World
But the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child changes all of that. The treaty
supplants this traditional presumption in favor of parents with a new
presumption in favor of the state.
According to Geraldine van Bueren, an international scholar who assisted in
the drafting of the CRC, the language of “best interests provides
decision and policy makers with the authority to substitute their own
decisions for either the child’s or the parents’, providing it is based on
considerations of the best interests of the child.”
So instead of placing the burden of proof on the government to
prove that a parent is unfit, the Convention places the burden of proof on –
yes, parents. Any parent who claims that other interests might just
be more important than the state’s characterization of the “best
interest” of the child could end up battling the state to protect
their rights as a parent.
Where do we go from here?
There is a solution to this dilemma. The strongest, most effective way of
protecting children and parents from an alarming state-based agenda is to
amend the Constitution to protect parental rights. This can only take place
through the concerted efforts of millions of dedicated parents across the
United States.
Two immediate action items
Maybe you’ve already signed the petition to protect parental rights. If
so, we encourage you to take the next step of telling your friends about this
important issue. And
if you haven’t yet joined the campaign, consider joining today.
Article written for ParentalRights.org by
Peter Kamakawiwoole, Feb. 12, 2008.
The original article can be found here: http://www.parentalrights.org/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC={1655E4C8-EF5D-4222-9F97-558DBDB04D25}
In Best
Interest of the Child, California
Parental Rights Amendment, Child
Support, child
trafficking, children
criminals,children
legal status, children's
behaviour, Childrens
Rights, Civil
Rights, CPS, cps
fraud, deadbeat
dads, Department
of Social Servies, Divorce, Domestic
Relations, Domestic
Violence, family
court, Family
Court Reform, Family
Rights,fatherlessness, fathers
rights, federal
crimes, Freedom, Homeschool, judicial
corruption, kidnapped
children, Liberty,motherlessness, mothers
rights, National
Parents Day, Non-custodial
fathers, Non-custodial
mothers, parental
alienation,Parental
Alienation Syndrome, Parental
Rights Amendment, Parentectomy, Parents
rights, Rooker-Feldman
Doctrine, state
crimes, Title
Iv-D on May
26, 2009 at 5:00
am
Last
year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the impact of
ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC)
would have on Parental Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here
is that continuing analysis:
Article
9: A Child’s Right to a Family — Almost
Last
week, we began our series on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
(UNCRC) by looking at the Convention’s central focus on the “best
interests of the child,” which allows the government to substitute its will
for that of the parents. This principle is significant as we turn our
attention to one of the first rights that the CRC grants to children: the
right to remain in their family.
THE
RIGHT TO A FAMILY… ALMOST
At
first glance, Article 9 of the CRC may appear harmless and even idyllic: “a
child shall not be separated from his or her parents against their will,
except when competent authorities subject to judicial review determine, in
accordance with applicable law and procedures, that such separation is
necessary for the best interests of the child.” But despite references to
“competent authorities” and “judicial review,” a closer examination
quickly reveals that the emphasis on the child’s “best interests” grants
the government broad latitude to intervene in the family.
There
are many broad and diverse opinions when it comes to what makes a “good
parent.” Parents may read a popular parenting book, attend a parenting
class, or turn to their own parents or a trusted mentor for advice. Likewise,
there is also a broad range of opinions when it comes to when a child should
be removed from the home. Clearly a child who is being sexually or physically
abused should be saved from that circumstance, but what about more complex
issues? Should children be separated from their parents if they are spanked?
What about parents who are disabled or have a physical handicap? What about
families who are too poor to provide the best quality of living for their
children? There are many answers that could be given about what is in the
“best interests of the child,” depending on the person who is being asked.
This
is why the Supreme Court ruled in 1993 that the “best interests” test
could only be applied when a family is broken, such as in divorce proceedings
when the dispute is between two parents. When the family is intact, however,
courts are required to prove that a parent is “unfit” to raise the
children, which requires a state to satisfy a much higher burden of proof.
Article 9 destroys this distinction and uses the same test for families that
are broken and families that are intact. By analogy, the “best interests”
standard treats the government as if it were the other parent in a
divorce-proceeding, placed on the same footing as the child’s natural
parents in a battle for custody of the child.
TRAMPLING
ON PARENTAL RIGHTS
In
1980, the Supreme Court of Washington heard the case of a fifteen-year-old
girl who had enlisted state social workers in her quest to live separately
from her parents. The girl had resisted her parents’ efforts to discipline
her through grounding, and claimed that there was “conflict within her
home,” though when asked by a judge about the nature of this conflict, the
girl simply replied: “I just feel that there’s a communication gap
there.” In an imposing display of judicial power, the court ruled that the
conflict between the parents and the child was so severe that it justified the
child being placed under the custody of the state, even though the parents
were fit and their behavioral standards were not unreasonable.
Twenty-eight
years later, families in the United States are still at risk of losing their
children if the government believes it can do a better job. In 2004, a social
worker hastily accused the parents of one-year-old Julia of child abuse after
learning that she had suffered fifteen bone fractures in a period of five
months. The parents had no previous record of abuse, the government never
presented evidence that they had ever harmed their daughter, and several
medical experts testified that the little girl had a brittle bone disease that
was responsible for the fractures. But despite the evidence, the family court
took little Julia away from her family and placed her in a foster home, citing
her “best interests.” Julia remained in foster care until this past
December, when her family finally won her back. She is now four-years-old, and
has spent the last three years living with strangers in a foster home, but her
family is overjoyed to finally welcome her home.
More
recently an autistic boy was forcibly removed from his home despite the
evidence being “clear that the parents have always stood by and tried to
help their son.” Read about this tragic story on our blog here.
WHO
DECIDES?
Julia’s
happy ending was three long years in the coming – all because of government
officials who claimed to act in the “best interests of the child,” without
bothering to prove that Julia’s parents were unfit to raise her. Her story
is a warning of the insidious sub-plot that runs through Article 9 of the CRC,
which grants the government a dangerous power over the lives of its citizens.
But
Julila’s story is more than just a warning. It is also a reminder that the
battle for parental rights is more than just a battle to change the
Constitution: it is a battle to protect real people, to save young lives that
are in no danger, except from the government that claims to protect them.
Innocent children and loving parents deserve far better than justice that
comes three years too late.
Please
forward this message onto your friends and urge them to sign the Petition
to Protect Parental Rights.
Article
written by Peter
Kamakawiwoole, Feb.25, 2008.
The
original article can be found here:http://www.parentalrights.org/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC={2169B234-8F84-4613-92AE-579B56A0BE77}
Sources
In Re Sumey, 94 Wash. 2d 757 (Wash. S.C. 1980)
UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/k2crc.htm
Family wins custody battle in court
http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=647184&category=REGION&newsdate=12/14/2007
Autistic
Boy Removed from his Home Because the Government Disagreed with the Parents
In Best
Interest of the Child, California
Parental Rights Amendment, Child
Support, child
trafficking, children
criminals,children
legal status, children's
behaviour, Childrens
Rights, Civil
Rights, CPS, cps
fraud, deadbeat
dads, Department
of Social Servies, Divorce, Domestic
Relations, Domestic
Violence, DSM-IV, family
court, Family
Court Reform, Family
Rights,fatherlessness, fathers
rights, Foster
CAre Abuse, Freedom, judicial
corruption, kidnapped
children, Liberty, motherlessness,mothers
rights, National
Parents Day, Non-custodial
fathers, Non-custodial
mothers, parental
alienation, Parental
Alienation Syndrome, Parental
Rights Amendment, Parentectomy, Parents
rights, Rooker-Feldman
Doctrine, state
crimes, Title
Iv-D onMay
27, 2009 at 12:00
pm
Last
year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the impact of
ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC)
would have on Parental Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here
is that continuing analysis:
Article
12: Suing Mom and Dad?
Last
week, we looked at how Article 9 of the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child gives the government authority to intervene in the decisions of parents
simply by appealing to the child’s “best interests.” This week, we
continue our in-depth analysis of the CRC by examining Article 12, which says: “States
Parties shall assure to the child who is capable of forming his or her own
views the right to express those views freely in all matters affecting the
child, the views of the child being given due weight in accordance with the
age and maturity of the child.”
Which
Children?
At
the outset, three key observations are readily apparent. First, this right
protects a child who is “capable of forming his or her own view,” which
must be given “due weight,” in accordance with his or her age and
maturity. Second, our government (“States Parties”) would be responsible
for ensuring that this right is respected, both in public places and in
private realms, such as the home. Finally, this responsibility extends to
“all matters affecting the child.” These
three tenets place incredible discretion in the hands of the government to
challenge – and even reverse – the decisions of parents.
Although
the Convention claims to protect children who are “capable of forming their
own views,” this
phrase is incredibly ambiguous. Indeed, the United Nations Committee
on the Rights of the Child recognized this ambiguity in 2006, when it asked
for input from all UN member-states on the meaning of Article 12. A report by
India’s Committee for Legal Aid to Poor suggested that the right to be heard
extends to “the decision of the families and should not be restricted to
Judicial and administrative proceedings only.” That same year, the Canadian
Child Care Federation asserted that “Children need to be ‘heard’ during
all stages of development, beginning in infanthood.” (emphasis in original)
“Suing”
Your Parents?
In
addition, Article 12 applies not only to legal and judicial proceedings
involving a child, but also to decisions made within the privacy of a family.
According to Dr. Geraldine van Bueren, Professor of International Law at the
University of London and a lead-drafter of the CRC, “the duty on the State
Party is to assure the right to freedom of expression in ‘all matters
affecting the child’ and as a result places duties on the state in relation
to matters traditionally relegated to the private sphere.” By referencing
“all matters affecting the child,” van Bueren writes, “there
is no longer a traditional area of exclusive parental or family
decision-making.”
Although
the CRC has not been ratified by the United States, our own courts have
nevertheless begun to allow children to actively assert their “right
to be heard.” The
Florida State Supreme Court ruled in 2000 that a fifteen-year-old boy in
foster care was entitled to a judicial hearing and a lawyer to contest his
placement in a mental health institution. It makes sense to grant such a right
to a fifteen-year-old who does not have parents and is in the custody of the
state, but in 2003, the Florida
court extended its ruling to say that children in foster care were entitled to
legal hearings and appointment of a lawyer, in order to give the child a
“meaningful opportunity to be heard.” Although
the court did not say “all children,” it seems reasonable to infer that
this legal standard could be applied to children well under fifteen years old.
The
result of this and similar rulings has been children – some far younger than
fifteen – who are successfully suing their own parents under the direction
of a relative or government worker. As recently as June 2007, a nine-year-old
boy in Minnesota sued both his parents through a government-appointed guardian
ad litem and won $100,000 from their insurance company for injuries due to the
“faulty installation” of his car seat. Children and even infants in states
like Kansas, Florida, and New Hampshire have also successfully sued their
parents for being involved in automobile accidents, being hit by a car in a
parking lot, and even for prenatal injuries suffered when the mother was hit
by an oncoming vehicle because she did not use a crosswalk.
Children
in Harm’s Way
These
cases illustrate the danger that “right to be heard” poses to children,
especially to infants and young children, who are often completely unaware of
what they are doing when they “sue” a parent. According to Dr. Martin
Guggenheim, Professor of Law at New York University and President of the
National Coalition for Child Protection Reform (NCCPR), the modern “children’s
rights movement” encourages litigation to enforce children’s rights,
but fails to recognize that such litigation is “used more often than not as
an opportunity to ‘take it to the judge,’” rather than to protect
children. Thus, “more children are enmeshed in legal proceedings than would
have been imaginable a generation ago,” as adults seek to invoke their
children’s rights to “gain the upper hand” against an ex-wife,
corporation, or auto insurance company.
The danger of Article 12 is that it grants the government broad, discretionary
legal authority, to protect the child’s nebulous “right to be heard” at
all times when the child’s interests are involved. Thankfully,
our courts have not yet adopted this philosophy in “all matters affecting
the child,” but if the CRC is ratified or imposed on the United States
through customary international law, that will change.
America’s
experience has opened parents up to extensive litigation, while often using
the child’s “interests” as a way to claim a sort of “moral high
ground” in disputes that are really between adults. When the bonds between
children and their families are tried in the fires of litigation, they are
often scorched in the process. Whenever we empower
the government to be the arbiter, we are risking the welfare of our children
and families.
Please forward this message to your friends and urge them to sign the Petition
to Protect Parental Rights at http://www.parentalrights.org/join-the-fight.
Article
written for ParentalRights.org by Peter Kamakawiwoole, March 5, 2008.
The
original article can be found here: http://www.parentalrights.org/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC={29FA17E8-B22C-461E-9B69-DEAA49DA0B9D}
Sources
UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/k2crc.htm
Florida Supreme Court gives “silenced” children the right to be heard
http://www.floridasupremecourt.org/decisions/pre2004/bin/sc00-2044.pdf
Committee
for Legal Aid to Poor, “The Right of the Child to be Heard” (India)
http://www.crin.org/docs/GDD_2006_CLAP.doc
Canadian
Child Care Federation, “To Speak, Participate and Decide” (Canada)
http://www.cccf-fcsge.ca/pdf/Right_to_be_Heard.pdf
Geraldine
van Bueren, The
International Law of Children’s Rights (1995):
137.
Harrison
v. Harrison, 733 N.W.2d 451 (Minn. S.C. 2007); for additional cases
involving children suing parents, see Nocktonick
v. Nocktonick, 227 Kan. 758 (Kan. S.C. 1980) and Bonte for Bonte
v. Bonte, 616 A.2d 464 (New Hamp. S.C. 1992).
Martin
Guggenheim, What’s
Wrong with Children’s Rights (2005):
245.
In adoption
abuse, Autism, Best
Interest of the Child, California
Parental Rights Amendment, Child
Support, child
trafficking,children
criminals, children
legal status, children's
behaviour, Childrens
Rights, Civil
Rights, CPS, cps
fraud, deadbeat
dads,Department
of Social Servies, Divorce, Domestic
Relations, Domestic
Violence, DSM-IV, family
court, Family
Court Reform,Family
Rights, fatherlessness, fathers
rights, federal
crimes, Foster
CAre Abuse, Freedom, Homeschool, judicial
corruption,kidnapped
children, Liberty, motherlessness, mothers
rights, National
Parents Day, Non-custodial
mothers, parental
alienation, Parental
Alienation Syndrome, Parental
Rights Amendment, Parentectomy, Parents
rights, Rooker-Feldman
Doctrine, state
crimes, Title
Iv-D on May
28, 2009 at 4:00
am
Last
year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the impact of
ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC)
would have on Parental Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here
is that continuing analysis:
Article
13, part 1: Homeschooling Illegal?
This
week, we continue our series on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
by considering Article 13, which states that “the
child shall have the right to freedom of expression; this right shall include
freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds,
regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in the form of
art, or through any other media of the child’s choice.”
The crux of this article is the child’s “right
to information.” Children
access information through what they are taught and what they discover on
their own. This week, we will consider the Convention’s implications on what
children are taught.
Homeschooling
Article
13 is far more sweeping than any
right articulated by our Constitution or Supreme Court,
guaranteeing all children the right to seek information of all kinds.
International author and commentator Marian Koren explains that although the
state should generally refrain from interfering in the family, “the State
also has a positive obligation in supporting the possibilities for children to
seek information or to express their views.” Ultimately, “it is the duty
of the State to respect the rights of the child and his freedom to thought,
conscience, belief, expression and opinion.” (emphasis in original)
Although
the United States has not yet ratified the CRC, there is a growing sentiment
thatthe
state should bear the responsibility for ensuring that children are
“properly educated,” instead
of parents. A striking example occurred this past February, when
a California court declared in In
Re Rachel L. that “parents do not have a constitutional right to home
school their children,” unless they are certified by the state to teach. In
so ruling, the court declined to follow the Supreme Court’s 1972 decision in Wisconsin
v. Yoder and its 2000
ruling in Troxel
v. Granville, which guarantee parents the fundamental right to direct the
upbringing and education of their children.
Whose
Responsibility?
Rachel
L., like Article
13, presumes that it is ultimately the state’s duty to ensure that the
child’s right to information is respected. The California court
quoted repeatedly from an earlier California decision in 1952, which concluded
that children must be educated in traditional public or private schools,
subject to state standards and regulations: anything less would “take
from the state all-efficient authority to regulate the education of the
prospective voting population.” (emphasis
added)
The
language of “all-efficient
authority” is not the language
of liberty. According to Dr. Martin Guggenheim, Professor of Law
at New York University, “our future as a democracy depends on nurturing
diversity of minds. The
legal system’s insistence on private ordering of familial life ultimately
guards against state control of its citizens.” There may be
questions over the “best way” to educate children, but according to
Guggenheim, the American answer is that “unless
the answers are so clear that there is no room to disagree, parents are free
to decide for themselves what they believe will best serve their children.”
Thankfully,
the public outcry to this decision led California courts to decide to rehear
theRachel
L. decision this summer,
allowing parents – at least for the moment – to continue teaching their
children at home. But only time will tell whether the California courts will
have a change of heart, or whether the damaging decision will simply be
repeated. The strong words of the first Rachel
L. decision suggest that
this is a real possibility.
America’s
legal heritage has consistently held that parents, not the state,
have the right to decide whether their children would best benefit from public
schooling, a private school, or even learning at home, but this recent
decision from California highlights just how tenuous this freedom can be. If
we wish to secure these freedoms, we must act now to place
parental rights beyond the reach of judges</U? by
protecting them within the Constitution.
Article
written for ParentalRights.org by Peter
Kamakawiwoole, April 21, 2008.
Sources
Marian
Koren, “The
Right to Information: Too Vague to Be True?” in
Monitoring Children’s Rights, Eugeen Verhellen, ed. (The Hague: Martinus
Nijhoff Publishers, 1996): 675.
In
Re Rachel L., 73 Cal.Rptr.3d 77 (Ca.App.
2008)(VACATED)
Martin
Guggenheim, What’s
Wrong with Children’s Rights (2005):
24-27, 43.
Parental Rights – Analysis by Article of the UNCRC – Part 5 of 9
May 29, 2009 at 5:00 am
Last year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the
impact of ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC) would have on Parental
Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here is that continuing analysis:
Article 13, part 2: No, Thank You, Mom and Dad
In an age where information is becoming easier to access every day,
children face new and uncharted risks. Our American heritage has long honored
the right of parents to direct their child’s access to information,
recognizing that in the vast majority of circumstances, parents are best
situated to monitor their child’s activities and to provide necessary
guidance during the transition from childhood to adulthood. Unfortunately,
this vital role is being undermined by the rising tide of international
thought, far removed from our own tradition and championed by international
agreements like the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC).
Last week, we began our discussion of Article 13 of the UNCRC by looking at
its impact on what children are taught. This week, we return to Article 13 to
examine the right of the child “to seek information,” and the impact this
guarantee has on the relationship between children, their parents, and the
state.
Article 13 is divided into two sections. The first states that “The
child shall have the right to freedom of expression; this right shall include
freedom to seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds,
regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in the form of
art, or through any other media of the child’s choice.” The
remainder of the article clarifies that this right be restricted, but these
restrictions must be provided by law and necessary to “respect the
rights or reputations of others” or for “the protection
of national security or of public order, or of public health or morals.”
This article focuses on the implications of a child’s “right to
information.” Although our Constitution does not expressly grant such a
right, there is a growing trend – both within our boarders and abroad – to
grant children such rights.
Setting Children Free
Article 13 begins by guaranteeing to all children the right to seek,
receive and impart all kinds of information and ideas. Although some
proponents of the Convention allege that article 13 is particularly important
for children who are seeking to discover more of their identities after
spending years of their lives in the care of the state, there is nothing in
the text which limits this provision to such a narrow meaning.
According to advocates of the CRC, such as Marian Koren, international
author for the UN at the Hague, a more acceptable interpretation of article 13
would require the government to establish and support a whole host of
government programs aimed at educating children, such as “advice and
information services for children, free access to libraries and loans,
workshops for children on topics of their interest,” and so on. According to
law professor Bruce Hafen, such a “right” is a broad departure
from current US law, and not only poses difficulties for parents, but also for
schools, teachers, and educational administrators who have to make difficult
decisions about what they teach the children entrusted to their care.
No Thank You, Mom and Dad
While article 13 allows the right of information to be restrained in order
to “respect the rights or reputations of others,” this respect
does not extend to the decisions of parents. As Koren writes, whenever
the state feels that parents are “failing” to protect their child’s
rights, “it is the duty of the state to control parents
to take their responsibilities and to fulfill their tasks towards
their children.” (emphasis added)
American law has long recognized the importance of parents in guiding their
children to make good decisions. In 1979, for example, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled in Parham v. J.R. that “most
children, even in adolescence, simply are not able to make sound judgments
concerning many decisions, including their need for medical care or treatment.
Parents can and must make those judgments.”
The UNCRC shifts this recognized balance in favor of increased autonomy for
the child. According to Barbara Nauck, writing in the Cleveland State Law
Review, “the more assertive language of Article 13 presumably means that
Article 13 would prevail where there is a conflict between the child’s
desire to freely express herself and the parent’s interest in curbing that
expression.” Given the arguments advanced by many of today’s child
advocates, “the interpretation of the Convention that will be argued
in the courts is that the parent may act as counselor, suggesting the pros and
cons and possible consequences, but the final choice would be in the hands of
the child.” (emphasis added)
Our Children in Harm’s Way
It does not take a parent long to imagine the Pandora’s box that would be
unleashed if the final choice is placed in the hands of the child. With
television and the internet opening up an almost infinite number of avenues
for children to seek information, it is more important than ever for parents
to have the freedom to guide their children through the journey to adulthood.
Article 13, and the autonomous ideology that it perpetuates, undermines these
vital efforts.
Please forward this message onto your friends and urge them to sign the
Petition to Protect Parental Rights.
Article written by Peter Kamakawiwoole, April 25, 2008.
Sources
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
Marian Koren, “The Right to Information: Too Vague to Be True?”
in Monitoring Children’s Rights, Eugeen Verhellen, ed. (The Hague, 1996):
675.
Bruce & Jonathan Hafen, “Abandoning Children to Their Autonomy:
The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child,” Harvard
International Law Review (1996): 468
Parham v. J.R., 442 U.S. 584 (1979): 603.
Barbara J. Nauck, “Implications of the United States Ratification of
the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child: Civil Rights, the
Constitution and the Family,” Cleveland State Law Review (1994): 693.
Richard G. Wilkins, “Why the United States Should not Ratify the
Convention on the Rights of the Child,” Saint Louis University Law
Review (2003): 420-421.
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Iv-D on May
30, 2009 at 5:00
am
Last
year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the impact of
ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC)
would have on Parental Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here
is that continuing analysis:
Article
14: Religion Is Child Abuse?
This
week, we continue our series on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
with Article 14, which says that the government shall “respect
the right of the child to freedom of thought, conscience and religion,” and
shall also “respect
the rights and duties of the parents and, when applicable, legal guardians, to
provide direction to the child in the exercise of his or her right in a manner
consistent with the evolving capacities of the child.”
Proponents
of the CRC, such as law professor Jonathan Todres, has commented that Article
14 “provides for the role of parents in teaching religion to their children,
while ensuring that the government does not impose restrictions on any
child’s right to freedom of religion.” Nevertheless, a deeper
understanding of this provision reveals that the
purportedly “pro-parent” language is really another avenue
for government power, not a shield to protect parental rights.
How
much “direction” is too much direction?
On
its face, this article may seem to support the role of parents, but such a
position is merely wishful thinking. The
Convention merely recognizes the parents’ primary role to “provide
direction” to the child, and there is considerable disagreement on what this
“direction” should entail. For example, according to Faulkner University
law professor John Garman, Article 14 is one of the few clauses in the CRC
that “actually brings the parents into play to ‘provide direction to the
child.’”
But
another CRC proponent, law professor Cynthia Price Cohen, disagrees. According
to Cohen, one of the earliest drafts of Article 14 included “two paragraphs
that protected the right of parents to guide the exercise of this right and to
‘respect the liberty of the child and his parents’ with regard to the
child’s religious education.” When
the final text was adopted, however, all language protecting the rights of
parents to “ensure the religious and moral education of the child” was
omitted. This
omission makes no sense if the purpose of Article 14 was to protect the rights
of parents to instruct their children.
Religious
“indoctrination” as abuse?
The
danger to parents is compounded by a growing movement among American and
international academics to prevent parents from “indoctrinating”
their children with religious beliefs. For example, British scientist and
bestselling author Richard Dawkins recently described religious
“indoctrination” of young children as a form of child abuse. “Odious as
the physical abuse of children by priests undoubtedly is,” Dawkins writes,
“I suspect that it may do them less lasting damage than the mental abuse of
bringing them up Catholic in the first place.”
Dawkins
is not alone in his analysis. In 1998, bestselling author and professor of
psychology Nicholas Humphrey, teaching at New York University at the time,
argued for “censorship”
of parents, who have “no right to limit the horizons of their children’s
knowledge, to bring them up in an atmosphere of dogma and superstition, or to
insist they follow the straight and narrow paths of their own faith.”
Both
authors advocate an outside solution to “protect” children from
indoctrination: intervention by the government. In The God Delusion, Dawkins
quotes from Humphrey, who writes that “children have a right not to have
their minds addled by nonsense, and we as a society have a duty to protect
them from it.” Humphrey bluntly adds that “parents’ rights have no
status in ethics and should have none in law” – parenting
is a “privilege” that operates within parameters set by society to protect
the child’s “fundamental rights to self determination.” If
parents step beyond these boundaries by indoctrinating their children, “the
contract lapses – and it is then the duty of those who granted the privilege
to intervene.” (emphasis added)
Some
have called for international talks on whether children should be involved in
religion. Innaiah Narisetti of the Center for Inquiry (a U.N. NGO) said,
“The time has come to debate the participation of children in religious
institutions,” continues Narisetti. “While some might see it as a matter
better left to parents, the negative influence of religion and its subsequent
contribution to child abuse from religious beliefs and practices requires us
to ask whether organized religion is an institution that needs limits set on
how early it should have access to children.” Narisetti also said that
“The UN must then take a clear stand on the issue of the forced involvement
of children in religious practices; it must speak up for the rights of
children and not the automatic right of parents and societies to pass on
religious beliefs, and it must reexamine whether an organization like the
Vatican should belong to the UN”
The
“fundamental interest of parents”
This
aggressive censorship of parents captures the true spirit of Article 14.According
to law professor Bruce Hafen, the language of Article 14 views “parents as
trustees of the state who have only such authority and discretion as the state
may grant in order to protect the child’s independent rights,” and is
consistent with what the state deems as the child’s “evolving
capacities.” Such a calloused view of parents stands in stark contrast to
our own legal tradition, which has long upheld “the fundamental interest of
parents, as contrasted with that of the State, to guide the religious future
and education of their children.”
America’s
legal heritage has consistently held that parents have a fundamental right to
teach their children about religion, shielded from well-intentioned but
intrusive interference from the state. The
danger of Article 14 is that it disrupts this crucial balance, tipping the
scales in favor of the government and those who claim to “know better” in
our society. If we wish to secure these freedoms, we must act now to place
parental rights into the text of our Constitution.
Please
forward this message onto your friends and urge them to sign the Petition
to Protect Parental Rights.
Article
written by Peter
Kamakawiwoole, May 5, 2008.
Sources
Jonathan
Todres, “Analyzing
the Opposition to the U.S. Ratification of the U.N. Convention on the Rights
of the Child,” in The
U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child (2006): 24.
Cynthia
Price Cohen, “Role
of the United States in Drafting the Convention on the Rights of the Child,” Loyola
Poverty Law Journal (1998): 30-31.
Bruce
Hafen, “Abandoning
Children to their Autonomy,” Harvard
International Law Journal (1996): 470.
Wisconsin
v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 232 (1972).
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rights, Rooker-Feldman
Doctrine, state
crimes on May
30, 2009 at 10:18
pm
Last
year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the impact of
ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC)
would have on Parental Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here
is that continuing analysis:
Article
16: Privacy From Parents
During
our series on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, a constant theme
has been the recurring intervention of government power in the relationship
between children and their parents. Broad
discretion for the state is particularly prevalent in the Convention’s
“freedom” provisions, which guarantee choices to children when it comes to
expression, information, religion, and association.
Perhaps
the most troubling of these “freedom” provisions is article 16, which
stipulates that“no
child shall be subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with his or her
privacy, family, home or correspondence.” More
so than any other section of the Convention, article 16 invokes the power of
the government in ways previously unseen and untested in America’s legal and
political history.
Paradigm
Shift
The
key to understanding article 16 is found in its absolute language: no child is
to have his or her right to privacy violated. According to American law
professor Cynthia Price Cohen, article 16 “uses the strongest obligatory
language in the human rights lexicon to protect the child’s privacy
rights.”
This
is a strong break from American law. According to Catherine Ross,
writing in the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law, the
concept of a “right to privacy” has been used within the American context
to support limited reproductive freedom for children, including the right to
receive information, counseling, and contraceptives without parental consent
or notification. But even in such cases, the Supreme Court has attempted to
draw some sort of balance between the privacy rights of the child and the role
of parents in raising and directing their children: never has the Court stated
that children have an absolute right to privacy even from their parents.
Displacing
Parents
In
contrast, the “right to privacy” within the Convention is far broader than
anything contemplated in American law or jurisprudence, bestowing an absolute
right to privacy which, according to the UN Committee on the Rights of the
Child in their 2004 report on Japan, includes privacy in “personal
correspondence and searching of personal affects.” This includes more than
just a child’s diary or letters to a pen pal: it includes e-mails composed,
websites visited, and a growing plethora of other means of communication with
the outside world.
Law
professor Bruce Hafen notes that this
strong language makes little allowance for the role of adults who are
unavoidably involved in a child’s private world – namely, the child’s
parents. Scholar Barbara Nauck adds that when the responsibility of
parents to “guide and direct” their children comes into conflict with the
right of children to have privacy, it is highly questionable whether parents
will have the lawful authority to interfere with the child’s privacy.
Only
the First Step
On
this basis alone, law professor Richard Wilkins has warned that Article 16 has
the potential to place the basic ability to discipline and monitor children
–activities necessary for effective parenting –
into serious doubt. In
addition, the provision’s absolute guarantees could also be extended through
state laws or the decisions of judges to include other “rights” guaranteed
by the Convention – such as the freedom of religion, expression, or
information – with devastating consequences to the authority and
effectiveness of parents. It is the absolute, all-encompassing nature of
article 16 that poses the real danger to both children and parents.
Please
forward this message on to your friends and urge them to sign the Petition to
Protect Parental Rights at http://www.parentalrights.org/join-the-fight.
Article
written for ParentalRights.org by Peter Kamakawiwoole, May 12, 2008.
Sources
Cynthia
Price Cohen, The Role of the United States in Drafting the Convention on the
Rights of the Child (1998): 34.
Catherine
Ross, An Emerging Right for Mature Minors to Receive Information (1999): 261.
UN
Committee on the Rights of the Child, Concluding Observations: Japan,
CRC/C/15/Add.231 (2004)
Bruce
Hafen and Jonathan Hafen, Abandoning Children to their Autonomy (1996): 472.
Barbara
Nauck, Implications of the United States Ratification of the UN Convention on
the Rights of the Child (1994): 700.
Richard
Wilkins, et. al., Why the United States Should Not Ratify the Convention on
the Rights of the Child (2003): 421.
Parental Rights – Analysis by Article of the UNCRC – Part 8 of 9
June 1, 2009 at 2:27 pm
Last year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the
impact of ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC) would have on Parental
Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here is that continuing analysis:
Article 18, Part 1: Government-Supervised Parenting
During our series on the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, most of
the articles we have considered have focused on the relationship between the
state and the child. Article 18 is therefore unique in its emphasis on the
responsibilities of parents, and the supervised relationship that these
parents have with the state.
Article 18 is also one of the more complex articles in the Convention,
divided into three sections that address distinct facets of the relationship
between parents and the state. This week, we will focus on the first section,
which says that “States Parties shall use their best efforts to
ensure recognition of the principle that both parents have common
responsibilities for the upbringing and development of the child,”
and that parents are primarily responsible for their children. As parents, “the
best interests of the child will be their basic concern.”
The danger of Article 18 is that it places an enforceable responsibility
upon parents to make child-rearing decisions based on the “best
interests of the child,” subjecting parental decisions to
second-guessing at the discretion of government agents.
Obligations on Parents?
Article 18 stands out because it affects not only the relationship between
the UN and the nation that ratifies the Convention, but also the relationship
between private individuals and their government: a relationship that is
usually changed through legislation at a local level. In fact, the UN’s
Implementation Handbook for the CRC explains that “when article 18
was being drafted, the delegate from the United States of America commented
that it was rather strange to set down responsibilities for private
individuals, since the Convention could only be binding on ratifying
governments.”
But instead of paying heed to this objection, the drafters of the CRC
rejected it, making the Convention enforceable against private individuals and
requiring that “parental rights be translated into principles of parental
responsibilities.” The Handbook itself notes that if the
actions of parents could be shown to impair the child’s physical,
psychological, or intellectual development, “the parents” – not
the state – “can be found to be failing in their responsibilities.”
(emphasis added).
The end result is parental involvement under state supervision. According
to Chris Revaz, Article 18 “recognizes that parents and legal guardians have
the primary responsibility for the upbringing and development of the child,
with the best interest of the child as their basic concern,” but also
invests in the state “a secondary responsibility to provide appropriate
assistance to parents and legal guardians in meeting their
responsibilities.” Roger Levesque opines that such supervision attempts to
“regulate the relationship between child and state,” essentially
relegating the role of parental and familial involvement to a position of
“secondary importance.”
Enforcing the “Best Interest” Standard
As a previous article in our series has already discussed, the “best
interests of the child” is a significant theme in the Convention,
providing “decision and policy makers with the authority to substitute their
own decisions for either the child’s or the parents’.”
The inevitable result, according to Levesque, is that “by placing the
burden on the State to take affirmative steps toward ensuring the fulfillment
of children’s rights, the Convention assumes responsibility
and invokes the State as the ensurer and protector of rights.”
This point is echoed by Law Professor Bruce Hafen, who warns that the
Convention’s emphasis on the “best interests of the child” creates “an
arguably new standard for state intervention in intact families.”
According to Hafen, legal authors in Australia have already suggested that
“under the CRC, parental childrearing rights are ’subject to external
scrutiny’ and ‘may be overridden’ when ‘the parents are not acting in
the best interests of the child.’”
Hafen warns that this conclusion – though in opposite to America’s
cultural and legal heritage – is “consistent with the CRC’s apparent
intent to place children and parents on the same plane as co-autonomous
persons in their relationship with the state.” This is a far cry from
America’s legal heritage, which has long held that parents have a
fundamental right to oversee the upbringing and education of their children,
free from government control. Article 18 makes it plain, however,
that under the Convention, it is the state that is ultimately responsible for
the fate of its children, and has authority to supervise its parents.
Article written for ParentalRights.org by Peter Kamakawiwoole,
June 24, 2008.
Sources
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu3/b/k2crc.htm
Cris Revaz, “An Introduction to the U.N. Convention on the Rights of
the Child,” in The U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child: An
Analysis of Treaty Provisions and Implications on U.S. Ratification (2006):
10-11.
Roger Levesque, International Children’s Rights Grow Up: Implications for
American Jurisprudence and Domestic Policy (1994): 214.
Bruce and Jonathan Hafen, Abandoning Children to their Autonomy (1996):
461-462, 464.
United Nations Children’s Fund, Impl
Parental Rights – Analysis by Article of the UNCRC – Part 9 of 9
June 4, 2009 at 12:30 am
Last year the Parental Rights.org group analyzed article by article the
impact of ratification of the
United
Nations Convention on Rights of the Child (UNCRC) would have on Parental
Rights and Children’s Rights in the United States.
Here is that continuing analysis:
Giving the State a Grasp on Your Kids
Part II of an in-depth look at Article 18 of the UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child
When Kevin and Peggy Lewis volunteered their child for special education
services, they never dreamed they would need a lawyer if they wanted to change
their minds. After their son developed several learning issues, including an
inability to focus in class and difficulty processing and understanding oral
and written communication, the Lewis’s turned to the Cohasset Middle School
in Massachusetts for help.1 But after a year in the school’s special
education program, their son was not improving academically, and felt harassed
by school officials who were closely monitoring and reporting on his behavior
– everything from chewing gum in class to forgetting his pencil.2
Initially, the Lewis’s requested that the school pay for private
tutoring, but as their relationship with the administration continued to
decline, the exasperated parents finally decided to withdraw their son from
the school’s program and to pay for private tutoring out of their own
pockets.3
Apparently, that option wasn’t good enough for the school.
In December 2007, Cohasset hauled Kevin and Peggy into court, claiming that
the parents were interfering with their son’s “constitutional right to a
free and appropriate education.”4
After a day-and-a-half of argument, the judge sided with the school in an
unwritten opinion.5
“This is truly devastating to all parents who have children on an IEP,”
Peggy said, referring to the individual education plans for
special education students. “What it means in fact when you sign an
IEP for your child, you sign away your parental rights. . . . Now
Cohasset has their grasp on my kid.”6
“Help” for Parents
At first glance, it seems odd that a school would take parents to court to
compel them to accept state services. After all, as observers of the case
commented, schools usually objects when parents demand more aid for their
children, not when the parents try to withdraw their child from the program.7
But according to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, once
parents have asked the state for assistance in raising their children, the
state has both the responsibility and the authority to see the job through –
even if the parents no longer support the state’s solution.
In addition to imposing legally-enforceable “responsibilities”
on parents, Article 18 of the Convention also requires states to
“render appropriate assistance to parents and legal guardians in the
performance of their child-rearing responsibilities,” and to
establish “institutions, facilities and services for the care of
children.”8
At first glance, the offer of “assistance” to parents
may appear harmless, and even generous, but appearances are often deceiving.
While the government may claim to offer services to parents on a purely
“voluntary” basis, parents soon discover that government “assistance”
isn’t always free.
When “voluntary” doesn’t mean “voluntary”
For examples of this dangerous trend, one need look no further than the
nation of Sweden, the first western nation to ratify the Convention.
In addition to mandatory sex-education, free child care for working
parents, and a national ban on corporal punishment, Sweden’s local
municipalities are also required by law to offer parents a broad array of “voluntary”
services that promote “the favourable development of children and young
persons.”9 Unfortunately, according to Swedish attorney and activist Ruby
Harrold-Claesson, voluntary care “in no way is voluntary since the social
workers threaten the parents to either give up their child voluntarily or the
child will be taken into compulsory care.”10
If the state determines at a later date that the “voluntary”
services are not helping, the municipality has both the responsibility and the
authority to physically “take a child into care and place him in a foster
home, a children’s home or another suitable institution.”11
According to Harrold-Claesson, since the emergence of such programs, “children
are being taken from their parents on a more routine basis.”12
Unfortunately, these disturbing trends are not confined to Sweden. Even
here in the United States, “voluntary” services
for parents are often the first step toward state control
of families.
Holding Children Hostage
As a young mother of three, “Katianne H.” faced tremendous difficulties
in making ends meet.13 Although she was never unemployed, Katianne had
difficulty putting her job ahead of the needs of her young family. So when her
three-month-old son Xavier developed severe allergies to milk and soy protein,
her pediatrician recommended that she relieve some of the pressure placed upon
her by requesting that her son be placed in “temporary out-of-home
care.”14 Thinking such a placement was truly “voluntary,”
Katianne agreed.
Within a few months, Xavier was weaned from the feeding tube to a bottle,
but when Katianne sought to bring him home, the state refused. It would take
more than two-and-a-half years – and a decision from the Nebraska Supreme
Court – before Katianne would win her baby boy back. 15
In a unanimous ruling, the court said the child should have been
returned to his mother as soon as his medical condition was resolved.
Instead, state authorities drew up a detailed plan requiring the mother to
maintain steady employment, attend therapy and parenting classes, pay her
bills on time, keep her house clean, improve her time management, and be
cooperative with social workers. When she failed to fully comply with
all these obligations within fifteen months, her parental rights were
terminated.16
The Court condemned the state for keeping Xavier “out of the home once
the reasons for his removal had been resolved,” and warned that a child
should never be “held hostage to compel a parent’s compliance with a case
plan” when the child could safely be returned home.17
A familiar pattern
According to studies, scholars, lawyers, and advocates, voluntary placement
in the United States – like “voluntary” placement in Sweden – is often
the first step toward the state getting a grasp on children. Here are just a
few examples from within our own borders:
· A 1994 study in New Jersey found that “parents often report
signing placement agreements under the threat that court action against them
will be taken if they do not sign,” particularly parents who have
“language or other barriers making it difficult or impossible for them to
read and understand the agreement they were signing.”18 There are also no
“clear legal standards to protect a family once it has entered the
system,” even if it enters voluntarily: “existing legislation
grants judges and caseworkers virtually unrestricted dispositional
authority.”19
· In 1998, Melville D. Miller, President and General Counsel of Legal
Services of New Jersey, warned that when parents sign voluntary placement
agreements, parents give the state “custody of their children
without any decision by the court that they have abused or neglected
them.”20 In addition, voluntary placement often waives a
family’s opportunity for free legal representation in court, leaving
families – particularly poor families – with “no assistance in
advocating for what they need” when disputes with the state arise.21
· In 1999, Dr. Frank J. Dyer, author and member of the American Board of
Professional Psychology, warned that parents can be “intimidated
into “voluntarily” signing placement agreements out of a fear that they
will lose their children,” and that in his professional
counseling experience, birth parents frequently complain that “if
they had known from the outset that the document that they were signing for
temporary placement of their children into foster care gave the state such
enormous power over them, they would have refused to sign and would have
sought to resist the placement legally.”22
· The Child Welfare League of America, in its 2004 Family’s Guide to
the Child Welfare System, reassures parents that the state “do[es] not
have to pursue termination of parental rights,” as long as the state feels
that “there is a compelling reason why terminating parental rights would
not be in the best interest of the child.”23 If parents and social workers
disagree about the fate of a child in “voluntary placement,” the CWLA
simply states that “if you decide to bring your child home, and
the agency believes that this would interfere with your child’s safety, it
has the right to ask the court to intervene. You also have the right to
explain to the court why your child’s safety would not be in jeopardy if
he came home.”24
· The National Crittenton Foundation, in a web booklet published for
young, expectant mothers who are currently in the foster care system, warns
in large, bold print that by signing a voluntary placement agreement, “you
will most likely lose all custody of your baby, even if you want to regain
custody of your baby after you turn 18.”25
Never Too Late
If one can learn anything from the stories of the Lewises, Katianne, and
the plight of Swedish parents, it is that the government wields
incredible power over parents who have “voluntarily” accepted its aid when
caring for their children. These parents are often poor, struggling,
and searching for the means to keep their families together, but instead of
helping them, the open hand of the state can easily become a clenched fist,
either bullying parents into submission or forcibly taking their children from
them.
Thankfully, it is not too late to protect children and their
families by protecting the fundamental right of parents to raise their
children, and to reject government programs that are unneeded or unwanted.
The state should only interfere with the family for the most compelling
reasons – not because loving parents were misled about the true nature of
“voluntary” care.
Please consider sending this message to your friends and urging them to
sign the Petition to Protect Parental Rights.
This article was written for ParentalRights.org
by Peter Kamakawiwoole, Jan. 29, 2009.
Notes
1. James Vazniz, “Cohasset schools win case v. parents,” The Boston
Herald (December 15, 2007) (accessed January 28, 2009).
2. James Vazniz, “Parents want son out of special ed,” The Boston Herald
(December 13, 2007) (accessed January 28, 2009).
3. Vazniz, “Cohasset schools win case v. parents.”
4. Vazniz, “Parents want son out of special ed.”
5. Vazniz, “Cohasset schools win case v. parents.”
6. Vazniz, “Cohasset schools win case v. parents.”
7. Vazniz, “Cohasset schools win case v. parents.”
8. UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, Article 18.2.
9. Ruby Harrold-Claesson, “Confiscating Children: When Parents Become
Victims,” The Nordic Committee on Human Rights (2005) (accessed January
17, 2009)
10. Harrold-Claesson, “Confiscating Children: When Parents Become
Victims”
11. Harrold-Claesson, “Confiscating Children: When Parents Become
Victims”
12. Harrold-Claesson, “Confiscating Children: When Parents Become
Victims”
13. “Katianne” is the name given to the mother by the Nebraska
Supreme Court, which decided her case in In Re Xavier H., 740 N.W.2d 13
(Neb. 2007).
14. In re Xavier H., 740 N.W.2d at 21.
15. “Nebraska Supreme Court returns boy to mother,” Omaha World
Herald (October 19, 2007) (accessed January 29, 2009).
16. “Nebraska Supreme Court returns boy to mother.”
17. In re Xavier H., 740 N.W.2d at 26.
18. Emerich Thoma, “If you lived here, you’d be home now: The
business of foster care,” Issues in Child Abuse Accusations, Vol. 10
(1998) (accessed January 27, 2009).
19. Thoma, “If you lived here, you’d be home now.”
20. Melville D. Miller, “You and the Law in New Jersey ” (Rutgers
University Press, 1998): 200.
21. Miller, You and the Law in New Jersey,” 200.
22. Frank J. Dyer, “Psychological Consultation in Parental Rights
Cases” (The Guilford Press, 1999): 26.
23. Child Welfare League of America (CWLA), “Placements to Obtain
Treatment and Services for Children,” A Family’s Guide to the Child
Welfare System (2004): 5 (accessed January 27, 2009).
24. CWLA, “Placements to Obtain Treatment and Services for Children,”
p. 5.
25. The National Crittenton Foundation, “Crittenton Booklet for Web,”
pp. 11-12. (accessed January 28, 2009)
All articles originally at http://mkg4583.wordpress.com