The Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) was enacted in 1978 in response to a crisis affecting American Indian and Alaska Native children, families, and tribes. Studies revealed that large numbers of Native children were being separated from their parents, extended families, and communities by state child welfare and private adoption agencies. In fact, research found that 25%–35% of all Native children were being removed; of these, 85% were placed outside of their families and communities—even when fit and willing relatives were available.
Congressional testimony documented the devastating impact this was having upon Native children, families, and tribes. The intent of Congress under ICWA was to “protect the best interests of Indian children and to promote the stability and security of Indian tribes and families”. ICWA sets federal requirements that apply to state child custody proceedings involving an Indian child who is a member of or eligible for membership in a federally recognized tribe.
At the time, not only was ICWA vitally needed, but it was crafted to address some of the most longstanding and egregious removal practices specifically targeting Native children. Among its added protections for Native children, ICWA requires caseworkers to make several considerations when handling an ICWA case, including:
Because these added protections address not only specific systems abuses directed at Native children—but also their unique political status and cultural considerations—ICWA has been labeled “the gold standard” of child welfare policy by experts and national leading child advocacy organizations far beyond Indian Country. Specifically, the measures ICWA takes to keep Native children in relative care whenever safe and possible have since become a best practice in the wider field of child welfare, and increasingly codified into state and federal law for the wider population.
Although progress has been made as a result of ICWA, out-of-home placement still occurs more frequently for Native children than it does for the general population. In fact, recent research on systemic bias in the child welfare system yielded shocking results. Native families are four times more likely to have their children removed and placed in foster care than their White counterparts. So in spite of the advances achieved since 1978, ICWA’s protections are still needed. Continue reading from National Indian Child Welfare Association
Indian Child Welfare Act (US Department of the Interior)
Indian Child Welfare Act (Child Welfare Information Gateway)
Indian Child Welfare Act: HAALAND V. BRACKEEN (Native American Rights Fund)
ICWA History and Purpose (Montana State Website)
“Keep Our Families Together”: A Law That Protects Native Families is at Risk (ACLU)
Indian Child Welfare Act (Nevada Department of Health)
Understanding The Indian Child Welfare Act (The ICWA Law Center)
Why Our Work is Necessary: A History of Child Removal (Denver Indian Family Resource Center)