Article

Risks and representations: Creating consensus narratives about risk with pregnant women involved with child protection systems in Aotearoa New Zealand and Scotland

Details

Citation

Critchley A & Keddell E (2024) Risks and representations: Creating consensus narratives about risk with pregnant women involved with child protection systems in Aotearoa New Zealand and Scotland. Critical Social Policy, 44 (3), pp. 378-402. https://doi.org/10.1177/02610183231215231

Abstract
Social work aspires to empowerment ideals, including taking a ‘non-expert’ position of professional curiosity, and validating the perspectives of people in contact with services. Yet in child protection, social workers are involved in practice that refutes the views and opinions of people and are positioned by their role as an identifier of abuse and risk manager. Social workers and people who are subject to child protection services can be locked into meaning battles regarding the effect of parental behaviour and the representation of risks to children. These negotiations over meanings are especially difficult in the pre and perinatal period, where who controls the representation of the baby's voice or best interests is fundamental to decision outcomes. Using Fricker's concept of ‘testimonial injustice’ as an analytical lens, this article draws on studies in two different contexts: Aotearoa New Zealand and Scotland, to examine the implications of the intense mediation of meanings that affect child protection practice. We find that concepts relating to the importance of mothering, love for children, and extended family relationships were sources of mother's disagreements with professional views of risk, but that through qualified agreement or advocacy from community workers, a shared risk narrative could be constructed.

Keywords
child protection; infant removal; social work; testimonial injustice

Journal
Critical Social Policy: Volume 44, Issue 3

StatusPublished
FundersUK Research and Innovation
Publication date31/08/2024
Publication date online31/12/2023
Date accepted by journal12/10/2023
PublisherSAGE Publications
ISSN0261-0183
eISSN1461-703X

People (1)

Dr Ariane Critchley

Dr Ariane Critchley

Lecturer in Social Work Child Protection, Social Work

Files (1)