Abstract

Historical child welfare policies explicitly aimed to exterminate Indigenous culture and disrupt tribal cohesion. The remnants of these policies form the foundation for the contemporary child welfare system. These policies view the child as an isolated and interchangeable asset, over which parents enjoy property-like rights, and in which the child welfare system is incentivized to “save” children from perceived economic, cultural, and geographic ills through an adversarial process. Extended family, community members, and cultural connections have minimal voice or value. These underpinnings inform federal policies that influence all child welfare systems, including tribal child welfare systems. The result is that tribal child welfare systems perpetuate the individual, rights-centric, adversarial child welfare system that harms Indigenous families.
 Indigenous children have the right to maintain connections to their Indigenous family, tribal nation, culture, and cultural education. These rights translate into obligations the community owes to the child to ensure that these connections are robust. Tradition-based systems of dispute resolution—frequently called “peacemaking,” among other names, but which we will call “circle processes”—offer a hopeful alternative.
 Circle processes are rooted in an Indigenous worldview that perceives an issue, particularly a child welfare issue, as evidence of community imbalance that directly impacts the community, and conversely, imparts an obligation on the community to respond. Through the circle, family and community can complete their natural reciprocal relationship.
 Tribal child welfare has the potential to be a transformative system that promotes community, family, and children’s health and the self-determination and sovereignty of tribes. This Article outlines the ways in which the modern tribal child welfare system has been structured to compartmentalize families and perpetuate historical federal policies of Indian family separation. This Article then suggests that circle processes are a framework for re-Indigenizing the tribal child welfare system to not just improve outcomes (for which it has the potential to do), but to also honor the interconnected, responsibility oriented worldview of Indigenous communities. Ultimately, however, tribes should lead that re-Indigenization process, whether through a circle process framework or otherwise.

Highlights

  • COVID-19 has revealed a startling truth: the nuclear family cannot survive without the support of community and systems around it

  • Studies evaluating child welfare practices as applied to Indigenous children in the 1960s and 1970s found that the vast majority of removals were based on vague grounds like “neglect” or “social deprivation.”[19]. Congress noted in its 1978 legislative findings to support the Indian Child Welfare Act that non-Indian social workers were frequently not just culturally inept, but perceived Indigenous deviations from the nuclear family, including Western modes of parenting and discipline or even living on tribal lands, as grounds for removal.[20]

  • Countering the lack of a community role in typical child welfare, Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) provides standing for tribes through exclusive tribal jurisdiction for Indian children located on tribal lands[43] and the right to intervene[44] or have cases transferred to tribal court for children located off tribal lands.[45]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

COVID-19 has revealed a startling truth: the nuclear family cannot survive without the support of community and systems around it. Contemporary federal funding requirements exacerbate this poor fit because they further pressure tribal systems towards a model of adversarial, permanency-oriented processing, similar to non-tribal systems This Article outlines the ways in which the modern tribal child welfare system has been structured to compartmentalize families and perpetuate historical federal policies of Indian family separation. This Article suggests that circle processes are a framework for re-Indigenizing the tribal child welfare system to not just improve outcomes (which it has the potential to do), but to honor the interconnected, responsibility-oriented worldview of Indigenous communities. THE CHILD WELFARE SYSTEM IS AN EXTENSION OF ANTIQUATED AND ASSIMILATIVE COLONIAL POLICIES

Historical Federal Indian Child Welfare Policies
Child Welfare as Child Saving
Parental Rights as Property Rights
The Indian Child Welfare Act
Pressures on Tribal Child Welfare Systems to Westernize
INDIGENIZING CHILD WELFARE
Operationalizing Duties
CONCLUSION
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