Wisconsin Dispositional Order — Protection or Services (Chapter 48— - Indian Child Welfare Act is a set of laws designed to protect Native American children from being placed in foster care or adoptive homes outside their tribe, and to ensure their cultural and spiritual heritage is preserved. The order generally applies when a Native American child is taken into tribal or state custody. It requires that Native American children who are removed from their families and placed in foster care or adoptive homes remain in their tribal community, where their culture, language, and spiritual beliefs are respected. The order also requires that Native American children who are placed in foster care or adoptive homes outside their tribe receive services and support to ensure their cultural and spiritual heritage is preserved. Wisconsin Dispositional Order — Protection or Services (Chapter 48— - Indian Child Welfare Act includes different types of dispositional orders, such as: • Indian Placement Preference (IPP) Order — ensures that a Native American child is placed in a home within their tribe or within their extended family, or, if not possible, in a home within their tribe's region. • Tribal CaregivinOrderde— - allows a Native American child to remain in their tribe's community while the tribe provides services and support to their family. • Transfer of JurisdictioOrderde— - transfers legal custody of a Native American child from one jurisdiction to another, allowing the child to remain in their tribal community. • Foster CarOrderde— - places a Native American child in foster care within their tribe or within their extended family. • AdoptioOrderde— - places a Native American child up for adoption within their tribe or within their extended family. • GuardianshiOrderde— - places a Native American child under the guardianship of an adult within their tribe or within their extended family.