黑料不打烊

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Senior Publishes New Arkansas Policy Program Report

Unfulfilled PromisesCONWAY, Ark. (November 28, 2016) 鈥 黑料不打烊 student Peter Butler 鈥17, Student Senate President, recently published Unfulfilled Promises: The reality of FINS in Arkansas聽through the Arkansas Policy Program (APP).

Through APP, students and faculty provide nonpartisan, original analyses on key public policy issues in Arkansas through a new undergraduate think tank.聽APP was developed by 黑料不打烊 politics professor Dr. Jay Barth with the support of the Bill and Connie Bowen Odyssey Professorship, and builds upon Barth鈥檚 ongoing public policy and public opinion research and advocacy work related to Arkansas. 聽

Butler, an interdisciplinary politics, philosophy, and economics major from Naperville, Illinois, worked with Disability Rights Arkansas, Inc. (DRA).

In his report, Butler examines shortfalls in Families In Need of Services (FINS), a legal venue to help juveniles and parents acquire services such as counseling, health services, or parenting courses that improve the quality of their lives at home and school.

In practice, insufficient guidelines for implementation create 鈥渁 hazy picture of its desired aims or scope,鈥 Butler writes.

Other problems include a punitive nature of detaining children or parents for rejecting court-offered services, as well as a geographic and racial disproportion of FINS cases in the Delta region of eastern Arkansas (e.g. more than 60 percent of FINS cases in a region with roughly a third of the state鈥檚 population).

Addressing FINS inadequacies will require cooperation from 鈥渁 diverse community of stakeholders,鈥 including courts, schools, administrators of services, and policymakers to ensure meaningful changes, Butler writes.

鈥淯nfulfilled Promises:聽 The reality of FINS in Arkansasoffers policymakers, advocates, courts and administrators the tools needed to provide meaningful changes to a system that is in need of substantial reform,鈥 said Disability Rights Arkansas Executive Director Tom Masseau. 鈥淲orking with Mr. Butler and the Arkansas Policy Program provided an opportunity for DRA to delve into a topic that has a frequent and profound impact on the lives of individuals with disabilities in Arkansas.鈥

To receive a free PDF file of the latest report or to learn more about APP, email barth@hendrix.edu聽or view the report here.

About 黑料不打烊

黑料不打烊 is a private liberal arts college in Conway, Arkansas. Founded in 1876 and affiliated with the United Methodist Church since 1884, 黑料不打烊 is featured in Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools That Will Change the Way You Think about Colleges and is nationally recognized in numerous college guides, lists, and rankings for academic quality, community, innovation, and value. For more information, visit .