US: Report – Fostering Responsible Tech Use: Balancing the Benefits and Risks Among Public Child Welfare Agencies (Press release)
Center for Democracy & Technology – June 01, 2024
Across the country, child welfare agencies work with over 390,000 youth in foster care each year by temporarily placing them in foster homes, facilitating adoption if parental rights are terminated, and managing their cases. These agencies are tasked with the high-stakes responsibility of ensuring the safety and wellbeing of youth in their care, but face many challenges, such as lack of coordination across agencies that work with foster youth, insufficient or biased data about a child’s environment, and heavy administrative burdens that contribute to high rates of social worker turnover. To address these issues, child welfare agencies are using, or considering, data and technology systems including artificial intelligence (AI) tools. However, despite the promises that data and technology provide, these systems risk entrenching racial and socioeconomic disparities, stigmatizing foster youth based on social and academic achievement, and compromising the privacy and security of personal data. This report highlights the ways that data and technology can mitigate some of the problems that child welfare agencies face, while also recognizing their inherent risks.
Also: Fostering Responsible Tech Use Balancing the Benefits and Risks Among Public Child Welfare Agencies: https://cdt.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/2024-05-31-CDT-Civic-Tech-Fostering-Responsible-Tech-Use-final.pdf