The Hidden Crisis: How America Fails to Protect Its Children

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From child labor to trafficking—and even foster care, sports, and detention—institutions meant to protect children often cause the greatest harm.

Editor’s Note
This article is the first installment of “Does Your Community Care About Children?”, a four-part series by Colin Greer and Reynard Loki. The series examines overlapping crises facing vulnerable youth in America—and the opportunities to create systems of care, safety, and empowerment. At its heart lies a moral and civic question: Does your community care about children? Subsequent articles will explore the juvenile justice system, health, and poverty, as well as solutions through coordinated public-private investment in education, employment, and care. Together, these pieces connect structural failures with practical, value-driven strategies, offering a call to responsibility, compassion, and collective action for a more just future.
This article was produced by the Independent Media Institute for the Observatory. It is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
The Hidden Crisis: How America Fails to Protect Its Children” by Colin Greer and Reynard Loki is licensed by the Observatory under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). For permissions requests beyond the scope of this license, please see Observatory.wiki’s Reuse and Reprint Rights guidance.Published: December 18, 2025 Last edited: December 18, 2025
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Colin Greer is the president of the New World Foundation. He is the author of three books of poetry, including most recently Defeat/No Surrender.
Reynard Loki is a co-founder of the Observatory, where he is the environment and animal rights editor.
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Introduction

There’s an invisible emergency in America: children toil in slaughterhouses, factories, and fields—night and day, unseen, unprotected, and endangered. A century ago, reforms such as compulsory schooling and restrictions on child labor marked a historic advance, shielding children from exploitation—a model still emulated worldwide. Yet today, austerity budgets, systemic neglect, and the ideology of “rugged individualism” are eroding those protections.

Child labor violations surged 31 percent between 2019 and 2024, according to the Department of Labor. Millions of children rely on federal programs for basic sustenance. In 2023, around 15.6 million children participated in SNAP, which provides monthly food benefits to low-income households. It is a paltry sum: In 2025, SNAP participants got an estimated $187 per month (approximately $6.16 per day) in benefits. Additionally, 41 percent of the recipients of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children were infants in 2024. This program protects the health of pregnant and postpartum women, infants, and children under 5 years of age who are at nutritional risk. Some children are literally without homes, sleeping in shelters, cars, or on the streets, making the invisible emergency painfully visible.

Politicians and the media routinely proclaim their devotion to “saving children,” yet much of this is merely moral theater. Underfunded government agencies, weak oversight, and patchwork enforcement mean institutions designed to protect youth often enable their greatest suffering. Across these systems, a typical pattern emerges: children are valued less than institutions, profits, or political convenience.

We therefore ask a simple yet urgent question: Does your community care about children? In this context, “community” is not an abstraction—it is the network of towns, cities, neighborhoods, and local organizations whose daily decisions determine whether children are protected or placed at risk. Communities can influence, and sometimes counteract, national and state policies through local action, oversight, and innovation. Their choices can shape the conditions of childhood as much as any federal law.

Institutional Abuse and Neglect

From foster care to immigration detention, systems meant to protect children often do the opposite. Foster care, religious institutions, immigration, the justice system, and other establishments commodify and criminalize childhood, showing patterns of systemic harm rather than isolated failures.

Foster care: Nearly 350,000 children were in state custody in 2024, according to the Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System, yet many face instability instead of safety. Thousands experience repeated moves, with more than a third undergoing three or more placements annually. High foster family turnover, caregiver burnout, and resource gaps force many into specialized group homes.

Placing children in unsafe or unstable environments resulted in more than 20,000 foster youth being reported missing in 2022, according to a federal report. The “systemic failure” of the foster care system is apparent, with one out of five of those who ran away likely becoming victims of sex trafficking, according to a Forbes article.

Youth aging out of care are particularly vulnerable to homelessness. Supporting youth through these critical transitions helps prevent them from falling through the cracks in the system.

Religious and athletic institutions: Decades of reporting reveal widespread sexual abuse in the Catholic Church and USA Gymnastics, with victims silenced and perpetrators shielded to protect reputations. The systems meant to protect and nurture children instead allow the perpetuation of these crimes. When an organization’s public image outweighs its responsibility, children suffer the most.

Immigration detention: Policies such as family separations, poor record-keeping, and overcrowded facilities create trauma for those detained, demonstrating how the system’s design perpetuates harm. U.S. Government Accountability Office and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) reports document thousands of separations, with more than 2,500 children affected in 2018. A 2024 study conducted by Harvard FXB/Harvard Global Health, along with other organizations, revealed that of 165 children detained at Karnes County Family Residential Center between 2018 and 2020, who underwent prolonged detention—with a median duration of 43 days, often under unsafe and unsanitary conditions—experienced significant harm to their mental and physical health, including under-recognized chronic health conditions and trauma. Children are cataloged like property, their identities misplaced or erased.

Justice system inconsistencies: Criminal liability and statutory rape laws vary widely, demonstrating the arbitrary valuation of childhood. Several U.S. states, including Florida, Alaska, and Pennsylvania, have no minimum age for prosecuting children as adults—and in some documented cases, very young children have been sent to adult criminal court. Others fail to protect adolescents from sexual coercion.

Exposure to gun violence compounds these inequities: more than 2,500 children died from firearms in 2023, with tens of thousands injured. In fact, the 2024 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health report states that firearms were the leading cause of death among children and teens, with such deaths increasing by 106 percent since 2013. Each mass shooting produces the same cycle of outrage and legislative inaction, with lobbying often outweighing concern for young lives.

Poverty-driven child labor: Economic desperation forces children into slaughterhouses, factories, and fields. Violations surged in 2021 and 2022, disproportionately affecting marginalized communities. Children are living evidence of institutional neglect: when survival becomes labor, innocence becomes a luxury.

These are not isolated failures—they form a single moral pattern: children are treated as expendable whenever profit, politics, or convenience demand it. Each institution tells the same story in a different language, reflecting a society that celebrates innocence while systematically eroding it.

Child Labor in the Shadows

Beyond institutional neglect, economic exploitation drives children into hazardous labor. Globally, millions face preventable risks. In the U.S., industries are increasingly relying on minors for low-wage work, particularly as immigration restrictions tighten. Florida lawmakers proposed lowering the minimum working age to 14 in 2025. Meanwhile, six states—Alabama, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, and West Virginia—enacted laws in 2024 weakening child labor protections.

Minors work in construction, meatpacking, agriculture, and domestic labor under grueling conditions, jeopardizing health, education, and long-term opportunity. Many work overnight or perform dangerous tasks, leaving them exhausted and vulnerable to accidents, exploitation, or trafficking. Homeless youth face amplified risk as the urgency to earn limits supervision and increases exposure to predators.

According to Human Rights Watch, child farmworkers such as the 15‑year-old pseudonymous ‘Ana Z.’ have described juggling school and working long hours harvesting on commercial farms. This burden often leaves them exhausted and undermines their education. Ana is not an exception; her circumstances reflect the gaps in protections for vulnerable youth nationwide.

Drivers of hidden child labor are complex: deregulation, weak enforcement, and corporate lobbying combine with family crises—poverty, unstable housing, or foster placements—pushing children into labor as a survival strategy. This cycle limits opportunities and perpetuates vulnerability.

Child labor in the shadows is a societal symptom: when children are treated as instruments of economic necessity rather than as humans with rights and potential, childhood becomes a commodity. Addressing these dangers requires more than enforcement; it demands a holistic approach integrating stable housing, educational support, and community-based oversight.

Paths to Protection

Preventing child harm requires sustained investment in prevention, stable placements, and systemic accountability. Community-based oversight—encompassing local review boards, youth councils, and family advocates—ensures that institutions cannot hide neglect or exploitation. Independent hotlines and watchdog agencies enable investigations to be conducted free from political interference.

Federal accountability and funding are essential. Then-Rebecca Jones Gaston, commissioner of the Administration on Children, Youth and Families at HHS, testified to the U.S. Senate in 2023:

“Our focus on prevention includes increasing supports and services, such as funding mental health programs and substance use treatment and recovery, for children, parents, and families before they are in crisis. I hear routinely from youth and families that have experienced the child welfare system that many of their families could have stayed safely together if support for their housing, child care, mental health, substance use services, and/or other concrete needs had been met.”

International examples highlight effective prevention: In Norway, the Family House model integrates education, health care, and counseling to keep families stable. New Zealand’s Oranga Tamariki combines oversight by the Māori people with state care, striking a balance between accountability and cultural autonomy.

Funding prevention requires innovation. Blended public-private investment can finance mentorship programs, mental health care, nutrition, and family support. School-based health coverage ensures access to medical care. Educational work opportunities complement schooling. Mentorship networks offer guidance, dignity, and a sense of belonging.

Government policies should protect children at transitional moments—aging out of foster care at 18, and after college, when support systems vanish. Free state college access for foster youth and low-income students can help sustain development. Local experiments often scale nationally; the New Deal began in states before being implemented federally. Even when imperfect, programs need time to evolve and improve; adaptation, not abandonment, is the goal. Welfare reform is about improving systems, not eliminating them. The purpose is enduring: ensuring every child has the conditions for a full, safe, and dignified childhood.

From Awareness to Action

Awareness is meaningful only if it sparks action. Stability, safety, and care are fundamental rights, not privileges. The 31 percent increase in child labor violations represents thousands of children whose potential is compromised—a societal pattern in which profit, politics, and convenience outweigh human life.

Communities should invest in prevention, oversight, and housing stability to support long-term well-being and overall health. Institutions responsible for child welfare need to be transparent, enforceable, and empowered. Effective protection encompasses cultural understanding and community leadership, offering universal school health coverage, supportive educational and work opportunities, mentorship and community support, resistance to austerity cuts, and support for foster youth during transitions. Programs should be improved when lacking, not rejected.

From children toiling in fields and factories to those without a safe place to sleep, the failure to protect youth reflects a moral crisis. Awareness is only the first step. Confronting this invisible emergency demands a sustained, community-wide commitment if a secure childhood is to be protected as a right, not a privilege. The guiding question remains urgent: Does your community care about children?