“She made you feel like there’s hope”: gaining a better understanding of how children negotiate their relationships with social workers from their own accounts
“She made you feel like there’s hope”: gaining a better understanding of how children negotiate their relationships with social workers from their own accounts
Recent years have seen a re-emergence of international interest in relationship-based social work. This article uses children’s accounts of their relationships with social workers to build on previous research to promote children’s safety and wellbeing. Interviews were undertaken with 111 children aged 6-18 years old across ten different local authorities in England, as part of the evaluation of MTM’s Signs of Safety pilots within the Department for Education’s Children’s Social Care Innovation Programme. The interviews reveal four key findings: that children look for care and reciprocity in their relationships with social workers and this can be achieved through listening and small acts of kindness; that they are adept at recognising aspects of social workers’ verbal and non-verbal communications which indicate to the child whether they are listening and interested in them; that there are times in which children are particularly vulnerable especially if parents are resistant to engagement or children’s trust is broken; and that children actively use their agency to control their communication and engagement. The article concludes by highlighting children’s relational resilience and the importance of ensuring opportunities for children to develop new relationships with social workers when previous relationships have broken down.
child protection; children and families; social work and sociology; vulnerability
Gorin, Sarah
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Baginsky, Mary
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Moriarty, Jo
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Manthorpe, Jill
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Gorin, Sarah
b44e0dc5-62ed-4c5e-ac90-4b2e0b056610
Baginsky, Mary
77e5405c-46f0-4d83-a171-ad9943ef065f
Moriarty, Jo
8448425e-8e20-49c6-b689-8170fa54b714
Manthorpe, Jill
202eae30-f95b-46f2-9c65-b6a86b71263b
Gorin, Sarah, Baginsky, Mary, Moriarty, Jo and Manthorpe, Jill
(2020)
“She made you feel like there’s hope”: gaining a better understanding of how children negotiate their relationships with social workers from their own accounts.
British Journal of Social Work.
(doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcaa148).
Abstract
Recent years have seen a re-emergence of international interest in relationship-based social work. This article uses children’s accounts of their relationships with social workers to build on previous research to promote children’s safety and wellbeing. Interviews were undertaken with 111 children aged 6-18 years old across ten different local authorities in England, as part of the evaluation of MTM’s Signs of Safety pilots within the Department for Education’s Children’s Social Care Innovation Programme. The interviews reveal four key findings: that children look for care and reciprocity in their relationships with social workers and this can be achieved through listening and small acts of kindness; that they are adept at recognising aspects of social workers’ verbal and non-verbal communications which indicate to the child whether they are listening and interested in them; that there are times in which children are particularly vulnerable especially if parents are resistant to engagement or children’s trust is broken; and that children actively use their agency to control their communication and engagement. The article concludes by highlighting children’s relational resilience and the importance of ensuring opportunities for children to develop new relationships with social workers when previous relationships have broken down.
Text
Gorin Accepted manuscript Pure
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 27 June 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 November 2020
Keywords:
child protection; children and families; social work and sociology; vulnerability
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 452441
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452441
ISSN: 0045-3102
PURE UUID: 97e182ce-d7c6-4d54-8a21-cf1c0ad3af80
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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 06:21
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:03
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Contributors
Author:
Sarah Gorin
Author:
Mary Baginsky
Author:
Jo Moriarty
Author:
Jill Manthorpe
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