Listen "We Were Once a Family, with Author Roxanna Asgarian"
Episode Synopsis
On this week’s podcast we discuss some updates on the Indian Child Welfare Act front, Minnesota becomes a trans youth refuge, and the blind spot in America’s knowledge of youth justice. Imprint alum Roxanna Asgarian joins to discuss her new book, “We Were Once a Family: A Story of Love, Death, and Child Removal in America,” which traces the lives and families of six children killed by their adoptive parents in March of 2018. Reading RoomIndian Child Welfare Act Think Tank to Strategize Legal Protections for Tribal Sovereigntyhttp://bit.ly/3YHTpeTWith Supporters from Indian Country Looking on, Minnesota Lawmakers Vote to Protect Indigenous Familieshttp://bit.ly/40jn7Z9Governor Signs Law that Codifies Indian Child Welfare Act Provisions into State Statutehttp://bit.ly/3YWsP21Calling for ‘Love’ not ‘Hate,’ Minnesota Governor Declares His State a Refuge for Trans Youthhttps://bit.ly/3L82c6MOn Point, March 9: Journalist Hannah Barnes on The Inside Story of The Collapse of Tavistock's Gender Identity Clinichttps://www.npr.org/podcasts/510053/on-pointWe’re Building a New Path to Prioritize Kinhttps://bit.ly/3mriEERNew Mexico Has Lost Track of Juveniles Locked Up for Life. We Found Nearly Two Dozen.http://bit.ly/3yuTurIFederal Study on Transfers of Juveniles Delayed, Againhttp://bit.ly/3FhI91WWe Were Once a Family: A Story of Love, Death, and Child Removal in Americahttp://bit.ly/3FkaUuVRead Roxanna Asgarian’s coverage of child welfare for The Imprinthttps://imprintnews.org/author/roxanna-asgarian
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