Document details

Professional Practice in Child Protection and the Child's Right to Participate

London; New York: Routledge (2023), xi, 118 pp.

Contains index

ISBN 978-0-367-71403-1 (pbk); 978-1-003-15068-8 (ebook)

CC BY-NC-ND

"This book explains and discusses how a child's right to freedom of expression is upheld through practice and decision-making in Child Protection Services (CPS). Using the right to expression as stipulated in Article 12.2 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) as a point of departure, it explains what CPS practices should look like and how they must operate to uphold and enforce the rights of the child by providing "the opportunity to be heard" in any administrative practice. Current research literature documents extensively, and across countries, how either the voice of the child is not heard or, alternatively, the existence of a pro forma/tokenistic approach to listening to the child throughout CPS practices. Taking a three-fold approach, this book establishes a clearer connection between rights and professional practice according to Article 12; extrapolates how rights-based practice is achieved during CPS practices; provides a comprehensive answer to the challenge of implementing Article 12.2 through policy and legislation." (Publisher description)
1 Children's Right to Express Themselves in Child Protection Casework / Asgeir Falch-Eriksen and Karmen Toros, 1
2 Rights-Based Professional Practice: Situating the Academic Discourse / Karmen Toros, 17
3 Professional Child Protection and the Child's Freedom of Expression / Asgeir Falch-Eriksen, 31
4 The Case of Assessment: Child Participation During Administrative Proceedings / Karmen Toros and Rafaela Eugenie Simonee Lehtme, 47
5 Child Protection Workers Follow-up with Children in Foster Care and Emergency Units/Homes / Cecilie Basberg Neumann, 63
6 The Case of Social Rehabilitation / Koidu Saia, 75
7 Participation of Children in Residential Care / Ingrid Sindi, 89
8 Conclusion: Making Rights a Part of Professional Practice / Asgeir Falch-Eriksen and Karmen Toros, 102