Featured@CASCW

Featured@CASCW features blog posts from CASCW staff on news and and other updates, as well as guest bloggers on research updates and perspectives from the field.

Interested in submitting a guest blog post to Featured@CASCW? Email the blog editor, Stacy Gehringer, at gehr0086@umn.edu for our guest blogger policy and guidelines.

September 2014

Part 2—Coping with Trauma and the Impact of Insecure Relationships (Child Complex Trauma Series)

By |2016-12-01T19:33:01-06:00September 23rd, 2014|Categories: Featured@CASCW|Tags: , , , , , , |

Child Complex Trauma & Good Outcomes Blog Series by Dr. Jane Gilgun The purpose of this blog series is to describe complex trauma, to show the importance of secure relationships, and to show factors associated with good social service outcomes when children have experienced complex trauma. Case materials bring the issues to life. Last week [...]

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Part 1—What is Complex Trauma? (Child Complex Trauma Guest Series)

By |2016-12-01T19:33:01-06:00September 16th, 2014|Categories: Featured@CASCW|Tags: , , , , , , |

Child Complex Trauma & Good Outcomes Blog Series by Dr. Jane Gilgun Children who experience trauma often are subject to complex trauma, which is a series of difficult life events that interfere with attachment relationships and that threaten healthy development in a range of domains, including emotional, cognitive, sexual, social, and physical1. Children learn to [...]

Child Complex Trauma & Good Outcomes Guest Series

By |2016-12-01T19:33:01-06:00September 9th, 2014|Categories: Featured@CASCW|Tags: , |

Over the next few weeks, we will feature guest posts from Dr. Jane Gilgun, Professor at the University of Minnesota School of Social Work. Dr. Gilgun’s research interests include how individuals (including children) overcome adversity, how violent behavior develops, and what violence means to perpetrators. Dr. Gilgun has developed several resources for the Center for [...]

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Introducing our new blog, Featured@CASCW!

By |2016-12-01T19:33:01-06:00September 2nd, 2014|Categories: Featured@CASCW|

The new academic year at the University of Minnesota School of Social Work begins today. A few CASCW staff members (myself included) have kindergarteners going to school for the very first time over the next two weeks, so we can relate to the "first day" experiences of our new and returning IV-E child welfare MSW [...]

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June 2014

Special Op-Ed Feature—The Search for Insight in Measuring Poverty: Does Personal Charity Have a Role?

By |2016-12-01T19:33:01-06:00June 27th, 2014|Categories: Featured@CASCW|Tags: , |

With powerful search engines spawning tidal waves of data, we are in a restless search for responses that will create an optimistic future for our children. For those of us who worry about vulnerable children in high-risk families, the search is especially urgent. Since “neglect” is a major entry point into the Child Welfare system, [...]

March 2014

Why the Elderly Should Care About What is Happening to the Very Young: The Intergenerational Connection

By |2014-08-29T14:01:22-05:00March 31st, 2014|Categories: Featured@CASCW|Tags: |

Glancing at the several piles of clutter on my desk, variously labeled as "Exposing the Achievement Gap and Its Consequences," I am tempted to rename this series, "Notes from a Cluttered Mind." "Putting socks on the octopus" may be the most accurate summary of where we are in our persistent search for closing the achievement [...]

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January 2014

How Social Justice was Inserted into the Framework of Child Welfare

By |2014-08-29T14:01:28-05:00January 13th, 2014|Categories: Featured@CASCW|Tags: |

The Child Welfare narrative, for some historians, is linked to this observation of a behavioral economist: "The fate of a child is determined by the accident of birth: to whom that child is born." Thus, the wheel of fate, the luck of the draw, fate without pity and fairness begins the drama of a child's [...]

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November 2013

An Intergenerational Link to Trauma

By |2016-12-01T19:33:05-06:00November 18th, 2013|Categories: Featured@CASCW|Tags: , , , , , |

Here are a few scattered notes from a seminar entitled, “The Intergenerational Transmission of Trauma: Recovering Humanity; Repairing Generations,” held Saturday, October 5th, at the Law School at the University of Minnesota. What drew my attention was not only the subject, “transmission of trauma,” a child welfare issue of central importance, but also the auspices [...]

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