From the perspective of parents: Interviews following a child protection investigation: preliminary findings
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Australian National University. Regulatory Institutions Network
Harris, Nathan
Gosnell, Linda
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The Australian National University, Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet)
Abstract
This report is based on interviews with 156 parents who had been investigated by a statutory
child protection agency following notifications that concerned 219 children. The aim was to
understand how parents perceived the investigation, how they felt about what had happened,
and how they had responded to it. Parents were recruited into the study if they had experienced
face-to-face contact with child protection workers because the statutory agency had deemed
the risk to their children significant enough to warrant an investigation. Particular emphasis
was placed on parents who had experienced this kind of investigation for the first time (as
parents), so that the interviews captured the experience with a child protection authority
unclouded by past incidents. Questions focused on perceptions of what child protection
workers did and how they went about it, what parents thought about the report that instigated
the investigation, the response of parents' social networks, feelings about being a parent, and
expectations of the future. Items on the emotions of parents that require scaling and analysis in
order to facilitate meaningful interpretation are not included in this preliminary report.
This study took place as one component of a Australian Research Council funded Linkage
Project titled Community Capacity Building in Child Protection through Responsive
Regulation. Three universities collaborated on this project: The Australian National
University, the University of South Australia, and the Australian Catholic University. The
Linkage partner was the ACT Community Services Directorate. The broader focus of this
Linkage Project, which was addressed through a number of separate studies, is whether the
theory of responsive regulation (Ayres and Braithwaite 1992; J. Braithwaite 2002) could be
applied to child protection practice to address systemic problems experienced by agencies in
Australia and beyond.
This study contributes to the broader project by providing an insight into the regulatory
encounter from the perspective of those who are usually the object of regulation: parents.
Responsive regulation assumes that individuals vary in the attitudes (postures) that they hold
towards authorities (V. Braithwaite 2003) and that these postures along with their willingness
and ability to respond to requests by authorities depends upon their perceptions of how
authorities have treated them (Tyler 1990). The ability of child protection systems to build
capacity in local communities depends upon the degree to which they are able to engender
feelings of hope and empowerment within these communities (V. Braithwaite 2004). This
study will use interviews with parents who have recently been subjected to a child protection
intervention to understand how variations in these encounters impact upon outcomes.
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This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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