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Children’s Advocacy Centres (CACs) in Sweden Experiences of parents and children Bodil Rasmusson School of Social Work Lund University Sweden e-mail: bodil.rasmusson@soch.lu.se ISCI Conference, Sidney 2009. Background - CACs. In United States since 1985 At Iceland since 1998
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Children’s Advocacy Centres (CACs) in SwedenExperiences of parents and childrenBodil RasmussonSchool of Social WorkLund UniversitySwedene-mail: bodil.rasmusson@soch.lu.seISCI Conference, Sidney 2009
Background - CACs • In United States since 1985 • At Iceland since 1998 • In Norway since 2007 • ”Barnahus” in Sweden: – first initiatives 1998 and 2004 • piloting initiated by the Government at 6 sites 2006-2007 • the number is growing
Objectives and basic Ideas • Child friendly environments • Interdisciplinary collaboration • All professions under one roof • Reduced amount of interviews with children • Higher quality of investigations • Increased numbers of decisions to prosecute • Increased numbers of legal proceedings
Evaluation of the piloting 2006-2007 Aim Give voice to children and parents who have been in contact with or been directly affected by CACs (one of the six studies)
Research questions • Children’s and parent’s experiences from meetings with the authorities? • Have the objectives of CACs been fulfilled from the perspectives of children and parents? • Who take charge of children’s rights – where and when?
Methods and sample Qualitative interviews with • 12 children, 8-15 years • 22 parents (both perpetrators and injured parties) representing all the six sites
Theoretical frame of reference • Child perspective • Society’s child perspective • Adult’s child perspective • Children’s own perspective • Children’s rights • Tensions in the law (children vs parents) • Children as informants, coactors and actors • The child as an individual and as a member of a family
Themes for the interviews • Place and environment • Reception from the staff at CAC • Previous contacts with professional helpers • Information • Experiences of the assessment processes and the possibilities for support, treatment and help • Good advices
Results – environment and staff • The physical environment and reception apprehended very positive • Environment too ”childish” according to teenagers • Negative reactions from children to the video cameras
Results – information and understanding of the procedures • Difficult for younger children to understand the forensic interviews • Difficulties for parents to understand the procedures and roles of different professionals • Access to information not always satisfactory
Results –support and treatment • Treatment, support and crisis intervention for the whole family not always satisfactory • Access to support and treatment dependent on resources and organisation at each CAC • Suspected perpetrators could feel excluded
Results –support and treatment • Sometimes reasons to talk about ”agencies” assault on children and families • Number of contacts with professionals could not always be reduced • Children could be informants, actors and coactors but are mostly objects for protection
Voice from a parent There will be too many authorities. I didn’t understand how serious it was from the beginning and the consequences. There will be four different investigations – by the police, social services, child psychiatry and one about the custody…
Voice from a parent About meetings with the police at CAC: It is very fine that it is not at the police station. Police is something frightening to children, I am convinced. It is so dramatic./…/ Good treatment when you enter the door and that is important. And then that they don’t use uniforms…
Voice from a girl, 16 years old About her contact with the social services: They had no plan for what to do, they just went on. I felt that they were always in a hurry. They had a lot to do. When you talk with them they seemed so stressed. Especially one of them, the other one is a little bit better, seems a little bit more calm. But it feels a bit sad. My boyfriend called her but she scolded him and told him that he shouldn’t bother …
Voice from a girl, 15 years old About the support from the social worker at CAC: I hurt myself before and she told me – ”when you get that feeling, just postpone it and tell yourself that you can do something else first, take a shower, do your homework and meet friends”. This has been in my thoughts since then. It has helped me a lot.
Challenges for CACs • Balancing of different perspectives – child, parents’ and family – separately and together • Inventions in the short and long term • Developing organisations according to the best interest of the child • And…..