Article

Trends in Child Protection across the UK – A Comparative Analysis

Details

Citation

Bunting L, McCartan CJ, McGhee J, Bywaters P, Daniel B, Featherstone B & Slater T (2018) Trends in Child Protection across the UK – A Comparative Analysis. British Journal of Social Work, 48 (5), pp. 1154-1175. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcx102

Abstract
Although numerous international studies point to large variations in child welfare interventions, comparative analysis has tended to focus either solely on England or the UK as a whole, discounting differences across the four UK countries. This paper compares trends in national statistics relating to the operation of child protection systems across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland between 2004/5 and 2013/14. Despite a number of legislative, operational and definitional differences between nations, a number of trends are apparent. All systems show an increasing orientation towards child protection as evidenced by rising rates of child protection investigation and children subject to child protection planning. Increasingly, this relates to emotional abuse and involves younger children aged 0-4 years. However, the way cases are processed can differ with only one in ten referrals resulting in a child protection investigation in Northern Ireland compared to one in five in England. Potential reasons for these differences are discussed and questions raised as to why, more than quarter century after the introduction of the Children Act 1989, we still have no clear picture of the circumstances of families who come into contact with social services or the services provided to support them.

Keywords
Child protection; Children and families; Comparative social work; Cross-national research;

Journal
British Journal of Social Work: Volume 48, Issue 5

StatusPublished
Publication date31/07/2018
Publication date online17/10/2017
Date accepted by journal25/05/2017
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25402
PublisherOxford University Press
ISSN0045-3102