A Poverty-Informed Approach
to Leadership for Change
Leaders set the tone for prioritizing what we do to improve the well-being of children and families. As part of CalTrin’s poverty-informed training series, we engaged leaders with a deeper understanding of strategies for building services that break poverty barriers.
The discussion and related materials focused on systemic change and building community capacity as well as poverty-informed leadership practices.
Leading an organization that is responsive and successful in addressing poverty barriers requires a well-considered process and vision. Below you will find resources curated by the CalTrin team intended to stretch how leaders think about poverty and the families they serve, as well as the role of the Protective Factors in developing poverty-informed practices. Let’s get started…
California Traning Institute
Hey, that’s us! Access recordings and materials from prior CalTrin trainings related to poverty-informed leadership, keep an eye on the calendar for upcoming webinars and workshops, and explore our relevant resource collections:
- Training Archive – Revisit recordings and materials from prior CalTrin trainings:
Note: You will need to log in to your CalTrin account to access select archived training materials. You can create a free account here.
Casey Family Programs
The Casey Family Programs’ Community Opportunity Map is an interactive tool that highlights the aspects of communities that are associated with safe children and strong families. This interactive, research-based framework is composed of select U.S. Census Bureau indicators and is available for any community in the nation to use. It was informed by significant evidence of the community factors correlated with child maltreatment and a healthy community framework developed by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. The tool maps community indicators at geographic levels defined by the user, from the state level down to neighborhoods. Access the Community Opportunity Map online here.
Child Welfare Information Gateway
According to the Child Welfare Information Gateway, families experiencing poverty are more likely to be reported for child neglect, and poverty is disproportionally present in communities of color. Understanding the causes of disproportionality—including racial bias as well as socioeconomic and systemic factors—can help prevent child neglect and help connect families to services and supports that meet their needs, are culturally responsive, and are devoted to equity. Check out these featured resources:
- Addressing Disproportionality
- Economic and Concrete Supports
- Separating Poverty From Neglect
- Social Determinants of Health
Institute for Child and Family Well-being
The Institute for Child and Family Well-being is a community-university partnership between Children’s Wisconsin and the Helen Bader School of Social Welfare at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Their mission is to improve the lives of children and families with complex challenges by implementing effective programs, conducting cutting-edge research, engaging communities, and promoting systems change.
The Overloaded: Understanding Neglect podcast from the Institute for Child and Family Well-being explores the complexity of neglect, its root causes and challenges that families experience that overload them with stress and the opportunities that we have to improve our communities, organizations, and systems that build strong families and thriving children. Access all podcast episodes online hereand check out these relevant topics:
- S1: Understanding Neglect: Poverty
- S2: Economic Stability: Let’s Help with Jessika Harlston
- S2: Economic Stability: Root Causes, Root Solutions with Clare Anderson
- S2: Social Connectedness: Family Resource Centers with Josh Mersky
Institute for Research on Poverty/Dr. Sarah Halpern-Meekin
The Institute for Research on Poverty (IRP) at the University of Wisconsin–Madison is the National Research Center on Poverty and Economic Mobility as designated by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Dr. Sarah Halpern-Meekin is a mixed methods sociologist and currently serves as director of IRP. Explore IRP’s collection of poverty research and resources, including:
- Poverty Fact Sheet
- Webinars
- Videos
- Poverty Research & Policy Podcast
- Focus On Poverty – IRP’s flagship online publication includes brief essays summarizing current poverty and policy research for non-researchers
In the Poverty Research & Policy podcast “Sarah Halpern-Meekin on ‘Social Poverty,'” Dr. Halpern-Meekin discusses the concept of social poverty. In meeting the needs of low-income families, how can we provide information or resources in a way that promotes dignity and human connection? We can be purposeful in designing programs that meet social needs in addition to economic needs. Dr. Halpern-Meeking also facilitated a webinar for CalTrin on the topic of social poverty. The recording and training materials from this webinar are available in our Training Archive here.
Additional Resources by Halpern-Meekin:
Mind in the Making (MITM)
Mind in the Making is a program of the Bezos Family Foundation that curates the science of children’s brain development and learning, shares it with the general public, families, and professionals, and translates this research into transformational in-depth training and materials.
In this brief MITM video, Behavioral Economics at Work, Lawrence Aber, PhD, discusses how behavioral economics is being used in program design to address barriers faced by parents and families in supporting child development. Dr. Aber is a Professor of Psychology and Public Policy at New York University. Watch it here.
Poor Kids: What Poverty Means to Children in America
“When we can’t afford to pay our bills, like, our house bills and stuff, I’m afraid, like, we’ll get homeless. Me and my brother will starve. You never know what’ll happen in your life, so yeah.” –Kaylie (age 10)
The 2017 documentary Poor Kids explores what poverty means to children in America through the stories of three families. After watching the film, discover what happened to these families in FRONTLINE’s 2019 follow-up story.
SPENT Simulation
The SPENT simulation was created by the ad agency McKinney for the Urban Ministries of Durham, whose mission is to provide food, clothing, shelter, and supportive services to its neighbors in need. SPENT offers more than a discussion about poverty—participants will actually experience what life is like for someone trying to survive poverty on a day-to-day basis. Whether you play individually or as a team/class, SPENT challenges players to choose between real-life, equally agonizing alternatives. Pay for your mom’s medicine or keep the lights on? Cover the minimum on your credit cards or pay the rent? Players are allotted $1,000 to live on for one month, and the game ends after 30 days or if the participant runs out of money sooner. Click here to play SPENT.
Stanford Center on Poverty & Inequality: America’s Poverty Course
It’s a special moment in U.S. history in which income inequality has reached unprecedented levels, poverty remains extreme, and racial and gender inequalities are intransigent. Why is there so much poverty and inequality? How might they be reduced? Learn the answers to these questions and more from leading experts in the field through Stanford University’s course on poverty and inequality. They offer a free nine-week online course, or you can opt to watch the course videos at your own pace (approx. 5 minutes each). Topics include Income Inequality, The Experience of Poverty, The Causes of Poverty, Educational Access & Outcomes, Social Mobility & Jobs, Gender Inequality, and Race, Ethnicity, & Immigration. Learn more and register for future courses online here.
Additional Research, Briefs, Readings, & Resources
American Public Human Services Association: Poverty and Neglect Are Not the Same — It’s Time to Realign Our Response
Chapin Hall:
- Addressing Economic Hardship Key to Preventing Child Welfare System Involvement
- A Key Connection: Economic Stability and Family Well-being
Children’s Bureau of Southern California: Children in Poverty – Poverty and its Effects on Children
Child Trends:
- Reducing Child Poverty for Our Youngest Children Requires that We Consider Their Unique Needs
- Poverty Matters for Children’s Well-being, but Good Policy Can Help
Columbia University and UW-Madison: The Effects of Child Poverty Reductions on Child Protective Services Involvement and Placement into Out-of-Home Care (Pac, J., Collyer, S., Berger, L.M., O’Brien, K., Parker, E., Pecora, P.J., Rostad, W., Waldfogel, J. & Wimer, C.; 2023). Access the full study here.
The Imprint: America Must Change Its View of Poverty and Neglect
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine: A Roadmap to Reducing Child Poverty
National Conference of State Legislatures: Poverty and Child Neglect: How Did We Get It Wrong?
National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges: Distinguishing Poverty Experienced by Families from Child Neglect
Nuffield Foundation: New Evidence on the Relationship Between Poverty and Child Abuse and Neglect
Prevent Child Abuse America: A Theory of Change for Primary Prevention in the United States
Safe & Sound: A Paradigm Shift from Mandated Reporting to Community Supporting
United Family Advocates: Family Poverty is Not Neglect
United States Census Bureau: Poverty Rate of Children Higher Than National Rate, Lower for Older Populations
USDHHS Administration for Children & Families: Understanding Families’ Experiences of Poverty
*Last updated November 19, 2024