The same pattern is occuring here in London UK. I have worked in two boroughs over the past three years and have seen a rise in the number of children's names being placed on the boroughs child protection register under the category of neglect. I saw this coming about five years ago when there was a change in social services "take" on child protection and children in need. There was a real big push to cut down the numbers of children on the register for various abuses. The main reasons given for this were: childrens names on the register is stigmatising and punitive of parents (the underlying belief here was that "abusers" were suffered some kind of social deprivation / inequality). It's hard to get a conviction of an adult for abuse of a child. Social services should be about partnership, though I argued that it is possible to assess the situational abuse from the chronic / pathological. Most parents were intelligent to the need to prevent the harm happening again and intended to do something about it. But some parents were just nasty pieces of work. There were some other factors. the process is traumatic for the child. there fore because of the above more children are remaining at home in potentially risky situations where there is insufficient evidence to prove/determine the exact type of risk the child faces and social workers are feeling they should promote partnership (though resource limitations forces them to take a "partnership approach", in many cases the social worker is the only resource ! so what choice do they have. Another big influence may be the caseload of workers not allowing time for them to productively engage with families. The category of neglect is a back door way of getting children on the register when the tolderance threshold for names being placed on the register under other categories goes up to make services look good.
[ Home |
About NDACAN | Datasets |
User Support |
Contribute Data |
Summer Research Institute ]
[ CMRL List Serve | Bibliography
| Measures Index |
Useful Links | Search ]
Copyright © 1996-2012 National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect