An official website of the United States government
Here’s how you know
The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.
The site is secure.
The
https://
ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.
The Capacity Building Center for States (the Center) identified the following resources as particularly helpful to child welfare agency decision-makers in understanding and building organizational resource capacity.
The Capacity Building Center for States (the Center) has identified the following resources as particularly helpful to child welfare agency decision-makers in understanding and building capacity in organizational infrastructure.
The Capacity Building Center for States (the Center) has identified the following resources as particularly helpful to child welfare agency decision-makers in understanding and building organizational knowledge and skills.
The Capacity Building Center for States (the Center) has identified the following resources as particularly helpful to child welfare agency decision-makers in understanding and addressing organizational engagement and partnership.
Learn how the Children’s Home Society of Washington’s Parents for Parents program aligns with Family First Prevention Plan goals in this recorded webinar.
Learn about the Indiana Department of Child Services’ upstream prevention approach to training and development, expanding the service array, and collaborating with system partners and providers in this recorded webinar.
Hear practical advice about transforming partnerships from the team implementing a holistic prevention program in North Carolina in this short podcast.
Use this tool with your prevention planning team to prepare for and tackle the adaptive challenges that many states face as they develop and implement prevention plans.
Explore how child welfare professionals and organizations can build capacity for implementing the reasonable and prudent parent standard (RPPS) for children and youth in foster care.