Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Children’s Legal Rights Journal

Abstract

This article reviews and critiques the public statements and positions taken by the National Association of Counsel for Children (NACC) as part of a symposium celebrating the 40th anniversary of its founding. The article suggests that for too many years after it was founded in 1977, NACC ignored glaring problems in the child welfare arena, including the ease with which children were separated from their families and placed into foster and the exponential growth of terminating parental rights. In addition, the article shows that for too many years NACC's focus was on winning the intramural fight with the Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) over which kind of representation for children is better while virtually ignoring how poorly parents were treated in the courtroom. In particular, NACC for far too long turned a blind eye towards the widespread failure to ensure that parents were well represented in child welfare cases. The article concludes on an optimistic note that NACC now appears more committed than ever to fight to keep families together whenever possible and has joined as an ally to the burgeoning movement of family defense which recognizes that, however important is the need for state power to protect children, it is equally important to guard against its misuse when it improperly destroys poor families.

First Page

12

Volume

39

Publication Date

2019

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