Barns rätt till skydd och barns rätt till delaktighet - (o)förenliga rättigheter? En kvalitativ intervjustudie om socialsekreterares beskrivningar av att arbeta med barn och ungas delaktighet vid LVU-ärenden
Abstract
Several investigations and reports show that Swedish social services do not sufficiently
provide children’s and young people’s right to participation in cases of care of young people
(special provision) act. The aim of this study was to explore how, if at all, social workers
working with children and young people in Western Sweden describe themselves working
with children’s participations in cases of care of young people (special provision) act.
Furthermore the study aimed to identify, based on the social workers descriptions, what
eventual challenges and opportunities exist in to supply children’s participation in cases of
care of young people (special provision) act and how these can be understood from a social
worker perspective. The method of the study was a qualitative interview method and a total of
six social workers participated. The collected data from the interviews has been transcribed
and later on analysed via thematic analysis. Based on the results of the study a theoretical
framework was constructed based on Lipsky’s (2010) theory of street-level bureaucracy,
Sommer, Pramling Samuelsson and Hundeide (2011) interpretation of the concepts of child
perspective and children’s perspective and Shier’s (2001) participation model. With the help
of the theoretical framework, the results of the study could be analyzed from the perspective
of social workers.
Findings showed that, as in previous research studies, there is a fear among social workers of
harming children by sharing difficult information. At the same time, the results of the study
indicate that there is a willingness on the part of the social workers to work with children’s
participation, but the work is varied and complex. Social workers must take into account,
among other things, the child’s often incompatible rights, care givers versus the child’s rights,
while at the same time experiencing limited time and resource shortages. From social
worker’s perspective the results indicate that it is these factors that limit children’s
participation rather than, unlike previous research studies, that social workers have a
traditional view of children. However, more research is required to understand the work with
children’s participations in cases of care of young people (special provision) act from the
perspective of social workers.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-02-08Author
Sylten, Rebecca
Keywords
children’s participation,
article 12 of the convention on the Rights of the child
compulsory care
care of young people (special provision) act
child perspective
children’s perspective
social worker perspective
Series/Report no.
Human Rights
2022:03
Language
swe