This page contains documents and other resources related to children's care in the Americas. Browse resources by region, country, or category.
Displaying 1281 - 1290 of 1438
This resource guide offers a fairly comprehensive guide to engaging with the Aboriginal community on Prince Edward Island, Canada. It includes a history of the use of residential schools for Aboriginal children, as well as a description of the widespread removal of Aboriginal children from their families and communities for adoption placement in the 1960s through the 1980s.
This fact sheet describes the rights of native children and families under the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) in the United States.
This study, produced by the Children’s Advocacy Institute at the San Diego School of Law, examines the activities of the federal government of the United States in regards to enacting and enforcing child welfare laws and ensuring that individual states are complying with minimum federal standards for child protection.
The First Peoples Child & Family Review proudly presents this Special Edition on Custom Adoptions in partnership with the Siem Smun’eem Indigenous Child Wellbeing Research Network at the University of Victoria. This edition contains research articles, agency experiences, cultural perspectives and personal stories that highlight custom adoption from a historical and contemporary perspective.
This paper forms Part 2 of a two-part discussion paper on Indigenous custom adoption.
This paper forms Part 1 of a two-part discussion paper on Indigenous custom adoption.
This article describes a group of Elders in the Lax kw’alaams community of British Columbia who provide support and mentorship to the Lax kw’alaams children in care.
This article provides an overview of inter-country adoption of children from the United States to other countries.
This paper reviews the literature on foster care and explains the issues that foster children in Canada experience.
This paper provides an overview of the violence perpetrated by gangs and other criminal organizations in Mexico and Central America which compels many children to flee their communities. The paper also describes the US government’s obligations to protect unaccompanied children upon arrival, and good practices of other governments relating to the protection of child migrants and refugees.



