New World, Old Frontiers. An ecological perspective on the problem of attraction and retention of statutory child protection workers in the West Australian Department for Child Protection’s Murchison District: 2009–2012
Abstract
The attraction and retention of statutory child protection
workers in regional, rural and remote Australia has been
identified at the national and state/territory level as a
priority challenge for the child protection sector. This research
emerged from the recognition of and response to this problem by
the Government of Western Australia’s Department for Child
Protection (the Department), Murchison District, and the
Department’s search for evidence-based responses under the
umbrella of the Australian Research Council Linkage Project
‘Pathways to Better Practice’ (LP0082806).
The size and distribution of the Australian population, and the
extreme nature of the physical environment, means that geographic
and demographic characteristics of place are central to the
challenges of service delivery in regional and remote Australia.
Maintaining the supply of a skilled and professional workforce to
these places is largely dependent on ‘migration’ employment
models, particularly for professional workforces such as that of
the Department. The significant over-representation of Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander children in the child protection
system is identified as presenting particular challenges. In
Western Australia, the employment of Aboriginal people is
integral to strategies across the sector to improve services and
outcomes for Aboriginal children and families. The geographic
distribution and demographic characteristics of the Aboriginal
population in remote Western Australia suggest additional
challenges for the delivery of child protection services in
locations such as the Murchison District. This is due to a
combination of factors, including the level of disadvantage and
the complex needs of this client population, the limited
resources in place, and the cultural dimension to practice.
In seeking to develop an evidence-based response to the problem
of attraction and retention of child protection workers in the
Murchison an ecological model has served as both the conceptual
and methodological framework for the research. This approach to
the study of the problem has meant attending to the multiple
settings in which the research is embedded, and the interplay
between variables acting on attraction and retention. These
variables range from the individual work and lifestyle choices to
the organisational responses and local characteristics of place
to the effects of the global labour market, and are consistent
with reflexive theories in sociology.
In exploring the dimensions of place, work and individual life
choices to attraction and retention, the research has embraced a
combination of methods: analysis of secondary statistical data to
examine the characteristics of the Murchison and Department’s
workforce; interviews; and surveys of the individual subjects of
the Department’s interventions, the Murchison District
workforce.
The research reveals the complex web of both actual and potential
factors that shape attraction and retention. These include
changing preferences and life trajectories both in the work and
non-work environment that demonstrate the limits of unilateral,
organisational responses. The research reveals a number of
paradoxical effects in relation to the Department’s strategies
to attract and retain. These include the constraining effect of
the introduction of changed qualifications requirements for child
protection roles on supply, and the disconnect between the
Department’s idealised representations and the realities of the
places to which the Department seeks to attract and retain. The
changing nature of place, work and the ‘life’ in
late-modernity which reveal the heterogeneity of preferences
presents both opportunities and challenges for future
interventions.
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