What kind of “poverty” predicts CPS contact: Income, material hardship, and differences among racialized groups
Publication Year
2022
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
The clear role of income poverty in explaining inequities in CPS contact between Black and white families and the consistent importance of material hardship in predicting CPS contact across all families underscore the critical importance of reducing income poverty and hardship and of distinguishing material need from maltreatment in the context of CPS. Our findings offer clear implications for policy intervention to reduce income poverty and material hardship. Such interventions might include extending the temporarily expanded Child Tax Credit and expanded food and housing assistance benefits, toward the ends of supporting child and family wellbeing and reducing economic and racial inequities in CPS contact.
Journal
Children and Youth Services Review
Volume
136
Pages
106400