System Kids considers the daily lives of adolescent mothers
as they negotiate the child welfare system to meet the needs of
their children and themselves. Often categorized as dependent and
delinquent, these young women routinely become wards of the state
as they move across the legal and social borders of a fragmented
urban bureaucracy. Combining critical policy study and ethnography,
and drawing on current scholarship as well as her own experience as
a welfare program manager, Lauren Silver demonstrates how social
welfare "silos" construct the lives of youth as disconnected,
reinforcing unforgiving policies and imposing demands on women the
system was intended to help. As clients of a supervised independent
living program, they are expected to make the transition into
independent adulthood, but Silver finds a vast divide between these
expectations and the young women's lived reality.
Digging beneath the bureaucratic layers of urban America and
bringing to light the daily experiences of young mothers and the
caseworkers who assist them,
System Kids illuminates the
ignored work and personal ingenuity of clients and caseworkers
alike. Ultimately reflecting on how her own understanding of the
young women has changed in the years since she worked in the same
social welfare program that is the focus of the book, Silver
emphasizes the importance of empathy in research and in the
formation of welfare policies.