Research Data

Illinois African-American Family Commission



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Eliminating Illinois' Educational Achievement Gap

An action plan developed from a symposium held on March 27, 2006 sponsored by the Illinois African-American Family Commission and Southern Illinois University Carbondale's Office of the Associate Chancellor for Diversity and the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute.

Policy makers, educators and community activists were gathered together to formulate recommendations for eliminating the debilitating disparities in academic performance.

 

Southern Illinois Forum

On June 25, 2005, the Illinois African-American Family Commission convened a forum at Southern Illinois University to assess the needs of African-American families in the state’s southern region. The forum focused on child welfare, economic development, criminal justice, health, welfare, human relations,    and education.

Some of the agencies and individuals represented included: the Illinois Department of Employment Security, Southern Illinois University, the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, the Illinois Prisoner Review Board, the Illinois Department of Human Services, the Illinois Department of Corrections, the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services, the Carbondale Human Relations Commission, the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute,  and a wide array of civic leaders and private citizens.

 

 

Social and Economic Profile of African-Americans in Illinois

Compiled and published by the African-American Family Commission and the African-American Family Research Institute, this document presents facts regarding many challenges faced by African-Americans in Illinois.  

Tables and charts are included relative to: demographics, education, employment and income, poverty, housing, health, child welfare and criminal justice. The geographical areas covered encompass the state of Illinois and select Illinois counties (those with the largest African-American populations).

 

State of The African-American Family Symposium

The African-American Family Commission, the African-American Family Research Institute, the Jane Addams College of Social Work, University of Illinois at Chicago, and the Institute for Research on Race & Public Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, convened a symposium on April 6, 2004 to access the state of the African-American family and community.  

The symposium brought together advocates, consumers, practitioners, policymakers and researchers from across the state.

 

 

These documents are presented in PDF format and require Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.0 or higher to be viewed.  Click the link below to download Adobe Acrobat Reader.

 


Additional Child Welfare Facts:

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African-American children represented 77% (35,499) of the 46,103 children in the Illinois foster care system in FY'98.

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Of the 43 agencies with Home of Relative contracts in FY'99 (representing 37% of the child welfare agencies in Cook County), 16 were African-American.

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Of the 16 agencies, 75% (12) provided a wide array of human services in addition to child welfare services.

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Ten of the agencies referenced above have been in existence between five and eighty years.

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The majority of the African-American child welfare agencies, like most agencies, are managed by competent, degreed professionals.  Most are accredited by the  Council on Accreditation of Services for Families and Children (COA) or other accrediting bodies and are licensed by the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services.

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African-American child welfare agency staff are qualified and capable of providing child welfare services.  These agencies face the same risk factors in caring for children as other child welfare agencies, but may face greater scrutiny.

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African-American agencies with Home of Relative contracts in FY'99, cared for 5,728 children who represent 28% of that population in Cook County.

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African-American agencies contributed significantly in securing permanent families for children, which resulted in Illinois receiving national and presidential recognition.  In FY'99, African-American agencies achieved 30% or 1,757 permanent family placements for the nearly 5, 900 children under the Home of Relative performance contract.

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Of the 16 agencies that have Home of Relative contracts, 94% performed at or above the required permanency contract goal.

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Of the child welfare agencies that were classified as the top ten performers, 43% were African-American agencies.  Those agencies accounted for 44% of the children who received permanent families.

 

 

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Last modified: April 01, 2008