Publication Date
2021
Volume
45
Document Type
Article
Abstract
The Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) is a federal statute that protects Indian children by keeping them connected to their families and culture. The Act’s provisions include support for family reunification, kinship care preferences, cultural competency considerations and community involvement. These provisions parallel national child welfare policies. Nevertheless, the Act is relentlessly attacked as a law that singles out Indian children for unique and harmful treatment. This is untrue but, ironically, it will be if challenges to the ICWA are successful. To prevent this from occurring, the defense of the Act needs to change. For too long, this defense has focused on justifying the Act’s alleged different treatment of Indian children. Now, it is time to refute this charge and demonstrate this difference is illusory.
Recommended Citation
Marcia Zug, ICWA’s Irony, 45 Am. Indian L. Rev. 1 (2021),
Comments
Published by University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons, 2021