Public policy often imposes administrative burdens that constrain people’s ability to access benefits and affirmatively exercise fundamental rights. In this article, we extend the administrative burden framework to argue that the state also places burdens on people who have involuntary contact with coercive state institutions, such as the child welfare system. Just as administrative burdens lock “undeserving,” marginalized populations out of benefits, administrative burdens also lock such populations into coercive intrusion. Drawing on interview data with system-involved mothers and child welfare caseworkers, we show how parents subject to oversight by child protection authorities must overcome substantial learning, compliance, and psychological costs or risk losing a fundamental right: the right to parent their children. We suggest that the burdens of service provision should be loaded onto governments rather than already strained and resource-deprived families.
Authors
Frank Edwards, Kelley Fong, Victoria Copeland, Mical Raz, Alan Dettlaff
Related Organizations
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2023.9.5.09
- ISBN
- 2377-8253 2377-8261
- Published in
- United States of America
- Rights
- © 2023 Russell Sage Foundation. Edwards, Frank, Kelley Fong, Victoria Copeland, Mical Raz, and Alan Dettlaff. 2023. “Administrative Burdens in Child Welfare Systems.” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences 9(5): 214–31. DOI: 10.7758/RSF.2023.9.5.09. Direct correspondence to: Frank Edwards, at frank.edwards@rutgers.edu, 123 Washington St Newark, NJ 07102, United States.