This seems sound, in general, but it depends on the question you are asking. If you want to know how many parents had their parental rights and responsibilities involuntarily terminated (as I thought you question implied) then you cannot get it from this strategy. Many parents voluntarily relinquish their rights and responsibilities because they come to decide that this is the better course of action. Thus their rights and responsibilities are terminated (in a broad sense of that term) but are really given up. The proportion of adoptions that follow voluntary relinquishments certainly varies over time and place. Brian Simmons has done some surveying on this and a nice analysis of voluntary relinquishments and this is available from the AIA Resource Center (http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~aiar c/). The argument can be persuasively made that some voluntary relinquishments of rights and responsibilities are "coerced" but there are also many cases where the biological parents decide without coercion that they do not want or cannot meet the responsibility of parenting any more. That's a long way of saying that the rate of termination of parental rights cannot be figured out as Marian Bussey suggests except in states in which you know the proportion of voluntary relinquishments. -- Begin original message -- From: Marian Bussey <Marian@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Date: Tue, 13 Jun 2000 14:44:22 -0600 Subject: RE: termination of parental rights To: Child Maltreatment Researchers <CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@xxxxxxxxxxx> Reply-To: CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@xxxxxxxxxxx You can calculate the number of children in foster care whose parental rights have been terminated using the AFCARS databases. I'm working with that data right now and just ran those frequencies. In FFY1998, in the combined 39 states plus D.C. and Puerto Rico reporting, 10.3% of children were legally free for adoption (either both parents' rights terminated, or one parent terminated and one parent died, or both parents died). The reported range within states is from 0% (Delaware and Florida - not possible to tell if they don't report this data) to 31.8% (Texas). See attached table. This may not meet your needs, because it is point-in-time data. But you could also calculate the child's age at termination, the time to termination from entry into foster care, etc. Hope this helps, Marian Bussey -----Original Message----- From: Joseph. A. Vorrasi [mailto:jav9@xxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, June 13, 2000 10:01 AM To: Child Maltreatment Researchers Subject: termination of parental rights Can anyone direct me to a source that documents the national prevalence of terminated parental rights? This information is not in the annual CDF Yearbook, and countless on-line searches and library queries have been fruitless. Thanks very much. Joseph Vorrasi jav9@xxxxxxxxxxx -- End original message -- Richard P. Barth, Ph.D. Frank A Daniels Professor Jordan Institute for Families School of Social Work 301 Pittsboro Rd University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3550 (v) 919 962 6516 (f) 962 1486
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