Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
346744 | Children and Youth Services Review | 2012 | 8 Pages |
Drawing on in-depth, semi-structured interviews with a sample of 24 child protection workers in the northeastern United States, we analyze how workers engage with non-citizen immigrant families. Confirming findings from previous scholarship on immigrants' fears when interacting with Child Protection Services (CPS), workers reported encountering different fear factors—the organizations, events, or people that instill fear in immigrant families. These included fear of deportation, fear of CPS workers as the people who remove children, and fear of CPS as a potentially repressive government agency. We also found that workers seek to minimize or leverage these fears in the engagement process—we refer to this process as fear management. Most of the workers interviewed seek to minimize immigrant families' fears, and we show that they employ four strategies to do so: providing knowledge, brokering services, doing dignity and status work, and learning culture.
► We discuss how child protection caseworkers engage with non-citizen immigrants. ► We report on the perceived factors that cause fear. ► We coin the concept of “fear management” to refer to various engagement strategies. ► We discuss practice and policy implications of the findings.