The Vanishing Black Family
How Welfare and Feminism Made Marriage Optional and Children Vulnerable
About the Book
Today, 70 percent of black children are born to unmarried parents and close to half grow up without a father at home. Both figures are significantly higher than the national average. Yet progressives—especially black leaders in the church, politics, academia, and the media—are silent. In The Vanishing Black Family (Penguin Random House/Sentinel; June 16, 2026), Delano Squires confronts racial justice advocates with the question they can no longer avoid: how can you dismiss the collapse of marriage when it is widening gaps in income, education, and
incarceration?
Deeply researched and unafraid to tell hard truths, this book traces black family life from American chattel slavery to the present. Its most powerful finding is that most black children are no longer born to—and raised by—married parents because of welfare policies and feminist activism in the 1960s. But Squires is not content to complain about the problem. He calls for a new civil rights movement led by black pastors, HBCUs, and other key institutions to ensure more children grow up in a loving home with a married mother and father. Anticipating inevitable challenges, he prepares marriage advocates for opposition from progressives who reject family revival for ideological reasons.
Equal parts cultural critique and call to action, The Vanishing Black Family promises to be the most consequential book on race in recent memory.

About the Author
Delano Squires is a contributor for Fearless with Jason Whitlock and writes about faith, family, and culture for Blaze News.
He is Director of The Heritage Foundation’s Richard and Helen DeVos Center for Human Flourishing and has previously written for Black and Married with Kids, The Root, The Federalist, Newsweek, The American Conservative, The Institute for Family Studies, and The Grio.