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Demand for 'change of culture' to meet needs of children most at risk

Posted: 27 November 2003 | Subscribe Online


Meeting the needs of the most vulnerable children requires behavioural rather than structural change, Audit Commission chairperson James Strachan told public and voluntary sector workers last week.

They were urged to challenge children and young people's minister Margaret Hodge over plans to prescribe change from the centre.

"In order to learn from experience, different localities will need the flexibility to introduce change that suits circumstances," Strachan said. "It won't always be structural change and major IT programmes. It will be about behavioural change and change in culture."
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He was speaking at a conference on whether children in the UK count, organised by Community Care, the Association of Directors of Social Services and The Guardian.

Although he welcomed many of the changes outlined in the children's green paper, Strachan warned of the dangers and distractions of focusing on structures alone. He highlighted the importance of listening to children and building on existing child protection services rather than overturning them.

He said the test of whether children in the UK counted was whether services and the quality of life improved for the one in five children in society most in need or at risk.

Labour MP Hilton Dawson told delegates it was "impossible" to say that children in the UK counted, given the treatment of unaccompanied minors, children in custody, disabled children and other disadvantaged groups.
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"Not one of us can say that, in the UK, every child matters because some palpably do not," Dawson said.

The former social worker, who intends to return to the profession, said that the green paper provided "the greatest opportunity in the whole of our working lives" to transform the lives of children and build services around them.

He said he was amazed to hear social workers describe the green paper as a threat to their profession, seeing it instead as a chance to revitalise social work. He welcomed children's trusts and planned to "join in the party when social services departments are gone".


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