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BRYCS Publication
| Brighter
Futures for Migrating Children: An Overview of Current
Trends and Promising Practices in Child Welfare
is a special BRYCS’ report from the BRYCS-USCCB/MRS
session held at the Child Welfare League of America
National Conference, Washington, D.C., on February
27, 2006. The companion publication and main presentation
at the session, Lessons
Learned: Best Practices with Immigrant and Refugee
Families, Children and Youth, is
by Dr. Ilze Earner, founder and director of the Immigrants
and Child Welfare Project and professor, Hunter College
School of Social Work. These publications provide
an overview of current trends and examples of effective
models drawn from the CWLA Child Welfare journal’s
recently published special issue on immigrants and
refugees, co-edited by Dr. Earner. BRYCS is featured
as a promising practice in this journal. |
Funding News
The Youth Outreach for Victim Assistance Program (YOVA),
from the National Crime Prevention Council and the National
Center for Victims of Crime, will select 20 new sites to
receive up to $3,000 to implement a youth-led public awareness
campaign. The YOVA project seeks to raise awareness about
teen victimization and services that can help teen victims
of crime, and to provide resources to victim service providers
so they can better reach and serve teen victims. Applications
are due May 16, 2006. For application information visit
the YOVA web site. (description taken from the National
Crime Prevention Web site)
Community Awareness and Outreach Campaign Projects
for the Prevention of Family Violence, Funding Opportunity
No. HHS-2006-ACF-ACYF-EV-0126, announcement from the Administration
for Children and Families (ACF), provides funds for the
distribution of credible and persuasive information by community
organizations to help break the cycle of family violence.
Faith-based and community organizations are eligible to
apply. Applications are due June 11, 2006. For application
information visit the ACF
Grant Opportunities web site. (description taken from
the ACF Grant Opportunities web site)
Mentoring Children of Prisoners, Funding Opportunity
No. HHS-2006-ACF-ACYF-CV-0029, The Family and Youth Services
Bureau (FYSB) is accepting applications for the Mentoring
Children of Prisoners (MCP) program. This program supports
the creation and maintenance of one-on-one mentoring relationships
between children of incarcerated parents and caring, supportive
adult mentors. Applications are due June 12, 2006. For application
information visit the ACF
Grant Opportunities web site. (description taken from
the ACF Grant Opportunities web site)
Events
Preventing
Gangs in Our Communities (Part I), a Web cast from
the Office of Juvenile Justice Delinquency Prevention and
the Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, will
air on May 23, 2006, at 2:00pm ET. Sign up for this broadcast
and Part II (airing June 6th, 2006 at 2:00pm ET) on the
DOJ
Connect New Viewer sign up page.
Fixing a Broken Immigration System, The Maryland
Office for New Americans is proud to sponsor this year’s
Annual Conference of the Maryland Coalition for Refugees
and Immigrants. The event will be held on June 14, 2006,
at Anne Arundel Community College, Arnold, MD. (Cost: $25
paid in advance.) For additional information, or to volunteer
at the conference, please contact Pat Hatch at the Maryland
Office for New Americans, (410) 767-8970.
Resources
The State of the World's Refugees: Human Displacement
in the New Millennium, from the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and the United Kingdom
Secretary of State for International Development, examines
the changing dynamics of displacement over the past half
decade. An online version of "The State of the World's
Refugees" is available on
www.unhcr.org. (description taken from the UNHCR web
site press release)
Immigrant
and Refugee Integration: New Films About the Experiences
of Newcomers in America, from Active Voice in partnership
with Grantmakers Concerned with Immigrants and Refugees
(GCIR) and Grantmakers in Film & Electronic Media. This
publication highlights a selection of top-quality documentary
films that illuminate the immigrant experience and issues
of integration such as English acquisition, education, employment,
health, economic contributions, family cohesion, and Transnationalism.
(description taken from the GCIR web site)
Evaluation
Toolkit, from the FRIENDS National Resource Center,
was developed to help program managers, administrators and
interested others develop and implement evaluation processes
that will be useful in day-to-day practice, and to help
provide evidence that their programs make meaningful differences
to children and families. One component of the Evaluation
Toolkit is the Logic
Model Builder, a collaborative effort between the
FRIENDS National Resource Center for Community-Based Child
Abuse Prevention and the National Clearinghouse for Child
Abuse and Neglect Information. (description taken from the
FRIENDS web site)
Problem
Oriented Guides for Police, Problem Specific Guide Series:
Juvenile Runaways, from the U.S. Department of
Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services,
provides a resource for law enforcement to analyze the problem
of juvenile runaways at the local level. It contains information
on the factors that may contribute to juvenile runaways:
triggers, seasonal and temporal issues, methods of departure,
destinations, duration, and consequences. The guide lists
specific questions to help law enforcement understand their
local problem and ultimately develop appropriate responses.
(description taken from the Department of Justice web site)
Focusing
Juvenile Justice on Positive Youth Development
, from the Chapin Hall Center for Children at the University
of Chicago, examines how juvenile justice agencies might
draw from the growing body of evidence on positive youth
development to improve services for youthful offenders.
(description taken from the Chapin Hall web site)
Youth
Permanency web page, from the National Clearinghouse
on Child Abuse and Neglect Information (NCCANCH), provides
resources that can help youth leave foster care to live
with legal, permanent families and assist them establish
permanent, caring connections to responsible adults. (description
taken from the NCCANCH web site)
Building
Bridges: Increasing Language Access for the Asian Pacific
American Community of New York City, a policy brief
from the Coalition for Asian American Children and Families
(CACF), examines language access to the education, child
welfare and mental health systems of New York City, including
common language barriers and recommendations for addressing
them. (description taken from the CACF web site)
Research
Effective
Truancy Prevention and Intervention, from the Wilder
Organization, is a review of research related to effective
truancy prevention programs of three types: 1) school-based
interventions; 2) community-based interventions; and 3)
law enforcement or court-based interventions. (description
taken from the Wilder web site)
What
Are Kids Getting Into These Days? Demographic Differences
in Youth Out-of-School Time Participation, from
the Harvard Family Research Project (HFRP), with support
from the William T. Grant Foundation, this brief distills
findings from the first phase of the study, which examines
demographic differences in youth's Out of School Time program
participation rates. The brief concludes with implications
for practitioners, policymakers, and researchers. (description
taken from the HFRP web site)
Getting
Ready: Findings from the National School Readiness Indicators
Initiative, from the National School Readiness
Indicators Initiative, identifies a core set of common indicators
that can be used to measure progress towards school readiness
and early school success. The report is based on a set of
core indicators of school readiness that emerged from the
work of 17 states involved in the National School Readiness
Indicators Initiative. (description taken from the Getting
Ready web site)
COMING
SOON:
BRYCS will publish our Positive Youth Development
Toolkit on June 1, 2006! Our June Web site will
introduce the Toolkit, providing an overview of the issues,
examples of creative programming, and resources for serving
refugee youth. Whether your goal is leadership development,
school success, or gang prevention, BRYCS uses a positive
youth development framework in order to understand and effectively
address the special strengths and needs of refugee youth.
On August 1, BRYCS will feature the topic of Child Care
and announce our newest publication: Understanding
and Responding to the Child Care System. This
new curriculum and training instrument will focus on increasing
understanding of the child care system through interactive
learning modules, and include strategies to build capacity
among refugee communities and resettlement agencies to respond
to child care as a barrier to employment.
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