Swedish welfare agencies ignore children's voices in family interventions
A new study reveals that child welfare workers in Sweden rarely ask children what they actually need, instead planning interventions based solely on parental input. Despite legal obligations and evidence that child participation improves outcomes, researchers found this exclusion is systemic—a gap with significant implications for service effectiveness and compliance with children's rights law.
Originaltitel: A collaborative process: child participation in interventions provided by Swedish child and family welfare services
<p>The right of children to express their views on matters concerning them is a core principle of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, as defined in Article 12. However, research shows that interventions provided by Swedish child and family welfare services are planned and based on parents' perspectives even though research suggests that child participation results in welfare service provision that is better matched to the children's needs. The aim of this study is to explore how child participation is constructed in interventions provided by Swedish child and family welfare services and to study which elements are of importance to this process. The article is based on a qualitative interview study with 14 family social workers and 11 children aged 7-16 with experience of family interventions provided by the child and family welfare services. The results suggest that child participation is a collaborative process in which both the child and the FSW have an active role to play. Participation is constructed through a series of seemingly small, everyday actions in the meeting between the child and the FSW. By actively asking questions and allowing the child to practice participation and influence the process, the FSW can, together with the child, work towards increased child participation in interventions.</p>