National Research Center for Parents with Disabilities: Parents Empowering Parents / Padres Empoderando a Padres

Welcome to the Center for Parents

The National Research Center for Parents with Disabilities conducts research and provides training and technical assistance to improve the lives of parents with disabilities and their families. We share our findings here on this website. We also offer information sheets, research briefs, and other resources.

Our resources are for parents with disabilities, legal professionals, social workers, and researchers, and cover a variety of topics, including child-welfare law and its effects on parents with disabilities, firsthand narratives from disabled parents about how they raise their children, and advice for professionals working with specific populations of parents with disabilities.

The Center for Parents recognizes that parents with disabilities know what they need. We are guided by the principle "nothing about us without us."

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Parents with Disabilities Data Dashboard

About 7% of parents have a disability in the U.S., yet the rights of disabled parents are continually challenged. The National Research Center for Parents with Disabilities’ Data Dashboard offers much-needed comprehensive information about who disabled parents are and what their parental rights are in each U.S. state. 

Access the Parents with Disabilities Data Dashboard

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What's Happening at the Center for Parents

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Annual Report

The National Research Center for Parents with Disabilities is excited to share our annual report from this last year. The report highlights key research findings, our many dissemination products and resources, community outreach efforts, and much more from 2024.

ACCESS our annual report

Strategies for Supporting Parent with Disabilities: when there is Child Protecting Involvement. January 30, 2025. 12:00pm ET. Speaker: Kara B. Ayers & Elizabeth Lightfoot. Lurie Institute logo. Headshot of Kara & Elizabeth. Strategies for Supporting Parents with Disabilities: when there is Child Protection Involvement

The webinar provides an overview of ableism and discrimination within child protection and provide parents with strategies for addressing these injustices. Presenters are Dr. Elizabeth Lightfoot, Distinguished Professor of Social Policy and Director of the Arizona State University School of Social Work, and Dr. Kara Ayers, Associate Professor at Cincinnati Children's Hospital. ASL and captioning were provided.

Access the webinar

ParentingWell Learning Collaborative

Massachusetts Behavioral Health Providers are participating in the ParentingWell Learning Collaborative

ParentingWell® is an approach to routine practice that makes talking about parenting, children, and family experiences a natural part of the conversation and of an adult’s recovery process. 

Learn more about the ParentingWell Practice Profile

Our Map Resources

Current U.S. State Legislation Supporting Parents with Disabilities

Despite notable achievements in other areas of disability rights, parents with disabilities continue to encounter significant discrimination. Parents with disabilities are more likely to have their children removed by the child welfare system as well as have their parental rights terminated. Moreover, within the family law system, disabled parents are less likely to gain access to custody or visitation of their children. Finally, prospective parents with disabilities encounter barriers to adopting children or becoming foster parents. While there are many reasons for the pervasive discrimination, it is notable that the child welfare, family law, and adoption systems are largely driven by state statutes.

Go to Interactive Map | Go to Legal Background | Go to Summary of State Legislation

Current U.S. State Laws Terminating Parental Rights on a Basis Including a Parent's Disability

Current laws in many U.S. states include parental disability as grounds for the termination of parental rights. While some states have no laws allowing for parental disabilities as such to be grounds for terminating parental rights, most states have laws permitting this. Our map represents the nine combinations of disabilities that states now allow as grounds for terminating parental rights based on a parent's disability.

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