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Open door policy

Posted: 21 August 2003 | Subscribe Online


Social workers have long complained that "no one understands what we actually do". How can we get it across to people what social workers deal with day to day?

One suggestion made in the Victoria Climbi' Report is that each local authority establishes a committee of members for children and families that contains lay members from other local authority committees. The idea is that they will help keep oversight of our activities and become better informed about the realities of child protection.

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But an even more radical way to inform the public has been tried in the US. As in the UK, family legal proceedings have been closed to public scrutiny, but now 13 states have opened up their family courts to the press and public.

Americans refer to these courts as Chips (children in need of protection or services) hearings. Decisions are made on standards of parental care, ending parental responsibilities and other matters determined by the standards of child care or extent of child abuse in the family.

The confidentiality of sensitive family matters has always taken precedence over any right of public access. Part of the rationale behind opening these courts to the public has been the simple adage that open justice is always better than closed justice. But it is also about educating the public as to what child abuse is about. In the words of the state of Minnesota's chief justice, Kathleen A Blatz: "How can we possibly tackle the problems so many of our children face when the public at large has no idea what is happening to them?"

In Minnesota, a three-year pilot scheme explored open Chips hearings between 1998 and 2001. On the basis of a generally positive evaluation by the National Center for State Courts all the Chips courts in the state were thrown open in 2002.1

An evaluation of the policy found none of the feared outcomes. Child sexual abuse within a family was still reported and children did not face bullying at school. The standard of report writing rose and there were fewer unsubstantiated allegations.

However, the public still appear to have only a limited interest in what goes on. Attendance increased just marginally - and that more from extended family members than the public. After some initial interest the press turned up for the more salacious cases only, in much the same way as they always had done for the criminal trials of abusers. Practitioners found reporting of their work to be ill-informed, although the judiciary found it to be "responsible".
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Although public awareness of child abuse may not have increased much, the evaluation did believe that professional accountability in the courts had been enhanced.

But not everyone has been happy with the policy. The Federal Department of Human Services does not have a policy of open courts, and some social workers have voiced their worries. These concerns led to three counties coming up with the alternative idea of citizen review panels. This involved recruiting volunteers to act as lay evaluators to oversee the child protection work carried out by the social and health care professionals. The panels had some success in their own right but did not head off the opening up of the Chips hearings, as some practitioners might have hoped.

Could we think the unthinkable and open up family proceedings courts or their equivalent? At present the idea is not even on the agenda. Various home secretaries have toyed with the idea of opening up the normally closed youth courts but that is more about "shaming" young offenders than educating the public about child abuse and social work.

The professional lobbies in this country have successfully resisted public calls for the naming of sex offenders and their whereabouts in the community.

Equally, the idea that social workers, magistrates, paediatricians and others would voluntarily open themselves up to greater scrutiny in the courts in the name of public education might be too much for some of them.

Terry Thomas is reader in social work, Leeds Metropolitan University, t.thomas@lmu.ac.uk 

References

1 National Center for State Courts, Key Findings from the Evaluation of Open Hearings and Court Records in Juvenile Protection Matters, Court Services Division, Denver



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