Indian Child Welfare Act
History and context of the policy
The Congress enacted the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) in 1978. This Act was a result of a series of deliberations, debates, and hearings to alleviate a terrific crisis of national proportions: the separation of Indian children from their families. The act was implemented due to the high rate of removal of Indian children from their traditional families and homes, primarily their Indian culture. Before its implementation, most Indian children were removed from their Indian families and put in non-Indian homes: presumably, with no Indian culture. The states received payments from the Bureau of Indian Affairs to remove Indian children from their traditional homes and place them with non-Indian homes. In a few cases, the rate of per capita of Indian children in foster homes doubled as compared to the rate for non-Indians. Such a dramatic rate of removing Indian children from their homes would threaten tribal survival. Congress was the first institution to recognize this, and it developed an interest in tribal stability (MacEachron et al., 1996).
Ideology/values/politics influencing the policy
The Act has deep roots in ideology that paints American Indians as savage heathens who have to be civilized for the defined goal of assimilation into the American society. Assimilation is the political erasure of the existence of the Indian community. It was perceived to be the answer to the American's Indian issues. Manifested in the idea of "save the man and kill the Indian" espoused by the Indian Industrial School, most people believed that it was a compassionate approach toward the Indian Child Welfare Act: separating Indian children from their culture. This was manifested in various forms, but the most aggressive was the removal of Indian children from their traditional families, starting with the Indian Boarding Schools.
Goals of the policy
The Indian Child Welfare Act intends to curb the historical practice of removing Indian children from their family and tribe and putting them in non-Indian institutions and families. The stated goal of the policy sought to safeguard the best interest of Indian children and support the security and stability of the Indian tribes (Connors, 2011). The policy...
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