Document Type

Article

Publication Title

New York University Law Review

Publication Date

2026

Volume

Vol. 101, No. 1

First Page

1

Abstract

The modern family regulation system is paradigmatically public. In the common account, the state plays a monopolistic role. It decides which families to investigate and which to prosecute, which families to surveil and which to separate, and which services and benefits to provision for families entangled in the system. Yet, this public family regulation paradigm obscures the role of private prosecution. Nearly half of states permit private individuals to initiate dependency prosecutions. In these cases, private prosecutors allege that parents have neglected or abused their children and seek state intervention on the fundamental right to family integrity.

This Article surfaces the understudied and undertheorized private prosecutions of the family regulation system and situates them within the carceral state. Drawing on sources including statutes, legislative history, case law, accounts developed by other scholars, information obtained through records requests, and interviews with practitioners and state officials, it sketches out the legal framework for these prosecutions and traces recurring patterns of use. This study reveals private prosecutions to be a tool of last resort: Private individuals opt to prosecute their loved ones—or even themselves—after the state has failed to meet their needs through other means.

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