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dc.contributor.authorGerdts-Andresen, Tina
dc.date.accessioned2023-10-18T19:09:01Z
dc.date.available2023-10-18T19:09:01Z
dc.date.issued2023-11-02
dc.description.abstractThis thesis explores how the child’s right to family life after a care order is issued safeguarded in care orders. The thesis consists of four studies: Three studies that analyze County Social Welfare Board decisions from period 1. July 2018 to 31. December 2019, and one study that provides an overview of research on how the child’s view is weighted in court proceedings, based on a database search performed in July 2020. The thesis examines to what extent current Norwegian practice appears in contradiction to human rights, with an in-depth study of how the County Social Welfare Board justifies the regulation of visitation rights and restricting telephone contact, and the use of digital communication platforms when a care order is issued. Further, this thesis explores when and how a child’s view is weighted in decision-making processes in court proceedings. This thesis expands our knowledge about how the value of family life is interpreted when a child is placed in public care. Through the thesis' discussion, it is argued that an increased visualization of the professional assessment may have a positive impact on the legal administration of the child's right to family life, as the written words in the care order affect how the child welfare services understand and facilitate for the child’s family life after a care order is issued. Further, the thesis raises questions about children's participation and understanding of children's autonomy in decision-making processes. There is no doubt that children, by being children, are not fully autonomous in most decision-making processes. The thesis seeks to reflect on what influences whether we understand children as autonomous, and how our interpretation of children as generally vulnerable - and children in public care as particularly vulnerable - indirectly influences how children are interpreted in a larger context.en_US
dc.description.abstractDenne avhandlingen undersøker hvordan barnets rett til familieliv etter omsorgsovertakelse ivaretas i omsorgsovertakelsen. Avhandlingen består av fire studier: Tre studier som analyserer fylkesnemndas vedtak fra periode 1. juli 2018 til 31. desember 2019, og en studie som gir en oversikt over forskning på hvordan barnets syn vektlegges i domstolssaker, basert på et databasesøk utført i juli 2020. Avhandlingen undersøker i hvilken grad dagens norske praksis fremstår som i strid med menneskerettighetene, med en fordypning i hvordan nemnda begrunner regulering av samværsrett og begrensning av telefonkontakt, og bruk av digitale kommunikasjonsplattformer ved omsorgsovertakelse. Videre utforsker denne avhandlingen når og hvordan et barns syn vektlegges i beslutningsprosesser i domstolsprosesser. Denne avhandlingen utvider vår kunnskap om hvordan verdien av familieliv tolkes når et barn plasseres i offentlig omsorg. Gjennom avhandlingens drøfting argumenteres det for at økt synliggjøring av den faglige vurderingen kan ha positiv betydning for forvaltningen av barnets rett til familieliv, da de skrevne ordene i omsorgsovertakelsen påvirker hvordan barneverntjenesten forstår og tilrettelegger for barnets familieliv etter at omsorgsovertakelse er vedtatt. Videre reiser oppgaven spørsmål om barns medvirkning og forståelse av barns autonomi i beslutningsprosesser. Det er ingen tvil om at barn, ved å være barn, ikke er helt autonome i de fleste beslutningsprosesser. Avhandlingen søker å reflektere over hva som påvirker om vi forstår barn som autonome, og hvordan vår tolkning av barn som generelt sårbare – og barn i offentlig omsorg som særlig sårbare – indirekte påvirker hvordan barn tolkes i en større sammenheng.en_US
dc.description.doctoraltypedr.philos.en_US
dc.description.popularabstractThis thesis explores how the child’s right to family life after a care order is issued safeguarded in care orders. How Norway safeguards the child's right to family life after a care order is issued has been the subject of criticism and public debate nationally and internationally several times in recent years and has also been the subject of several ECtHR judgments. This regards the value of contact between children and parents when a child is in public care and how a child's autonomy is understood in decision-making processes in child welfare law proceedings. Currently, there is minimal literature and limited research on the effectiveness of contact regulations. This includes alternative ways of securing a child's right to family life in cases requiring strict contact regulation. It is, therefore, a need for research on how regulation of contact between a child and his or her parents is justified, based on the interpretations of various risk factors in the assessment of what is in the best interest of the child. Of particular interest is how the child’s view is weighted in light of the child’s need for protection. As a contribution to the gap of knowledge, this thesis aims to increase knowledge and professional understanding of the elements that influence to what extent a child's right to family life after a care order is issued is safeguarded in the care orders. Contradictions and dilemmas between conventional rights and Norwegian practice are addressed. In order to explore how the child’s right is safeguarded, the analysis draws on a sociological approach to the value of family life. The thesis consists of four studies: Three studies that analyze County Social Welfare Board decisions from period 1. July 2018 to 31. December 2019, and one study that provides an overview of research on how the child’s view is weighted in court proceedings, based on a database search performed in July 2020. The first study examines to what extent current Norwegian practice appears in contradiction to human rights. With an overall finding of no correlation between any of the forms of contact regulations and the child’s age, the child’s characteristics, the child or parent’s special needs, the child’s reactions related to contact, or the collaborative climate in the case, study result reinforces the suspicion that current Norwegian practice may be in contradiction to human rights. The second study explores how the County Social Welfare Board justifies the regulation of visitation rights when a care order is issued. The study provides an in-depth study of justifications for the necessity of visitation regulations when a care order is issued. The findings show that justifications appear standardized and where the necessity of visitation regulation does not appear to be clearly justified. The third study explores how the County Social Welfare Board justifies restricting telephone contact, and the use of digital communication platforms after a care order is issued. The study provides an in-depth study of justifications for the necessity of the restrictions. Although these rights were only regulated in a limited number of care orders, findings show that justifications appear standardized and where the need for regulation does not appear to be clearly justified. As the care orders are presented, it is unclear whether such regulations are feasible due to the child’s age. It is also unclear whether the child submits to the decision, as the child’s view on the matter is not included in most care orders. The fourth study is a scoping review of when and how a child’s view is weighted in decision-making processes in court proceedings. Based on a systematic literature search, 11 original publications met the study’s eligibility criteria. The findings show that children under the age of seven are generally not given the opportunity to express their views in child protection proceedings and only rarely in family law proceedings. Children above the age of seven were increasingly likely to be included as a factor in the decision. It is, however, unclear whether the child’s view is weighted or if the child’s view is simply noted. Although awareness of children’s rights has increased, there still appears to be a discrepancy between the child’s right to participate and how this right is implemented in law proceedings, both within family law and child protection proceedings. This thesis expands our knowledge about how the value of family life is interpreted when a child is placed in public care. What value family life has for the individual child must be interpreted in close relation to the child's own experience and opinion. The thesis has, therefore, also included an analytical approach to how the child's view is generally emphasized in legal decision-making processes and contact regulation in particular. Through the thesis' discussion, it is argued that an increased visualization of the professional assessment may have a positive impact on the legal administration of the child's right to family life, as the written words in the care order affect how the child welfare services understand and facilitate for the child’s family life after a care order is issued. Further, the thesis raises questions about children's participation and understanding of children's autonomy in decision-making processes. There is no doubt that children, by being children, are not fully autonomous in most decision-making processes. However, the thesis attempts to raise awareness of how the Social County Welfare Board, in particular, but other decision-makers within child protection law in general, legitimize their own decisions. It is entirely acceptable to make a paternalistic decision if the child is not believed to be autonomous in the situation, either in whole or in part. However, the thesis seeks to reflect on what influences whether we understand children as autonomous, and how our interpretation of children as generally vulnerable - and children in public care as particularly vulnerable - indirectly influences how children are interpreted in a larger context.en_US
dc.description.sponsorshipN/Aen_US
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10037/31586
dc.language.isonoben_US
dc.publisherUiT Norges arktiske universiteten_US
dc.publisherUiT The Arctic University of Norwayen_US
dc.relation.haspart<p>Paper I: Gerdts-Andresen, T. (2021). A Childs’ Right to Family Life when Placed in Public Care; an Analysis of Whether Current Norwegian Practice is in Systematic Contradiction to Human Rights. <i>The International Journal of Children's Rights, 29</i>(3), 563-588. Also available at <a href=https://doi.org/10.1163/15718182-29030002>https://doi.org/10.1163/15718182-29030002</a>. <p>Paper II: Gerdts-Andresen, T. (2020). Fastsettelse av samvær ved omsorgsovertakelse. En analyse av hvordan nemnda begrunner sin utmåling. <i>Kritisk juss, 46</i>(2), 125–153. Also available at <a href=https://doi.org/10.18261/issn.2387-4546-2020-02-05>https://doi.org/10.18261/issn.2387-4546-2020-02-05</a>. <p>Paper III: Gerdts-Andresen, T. Barnevernsnemndas begrunnelse for regulering av telefonkontakt og bruk av digitale kommunikasjonsplattformer – en analyse. (Submitted manuscript). <p>Paper IV: Gerdts-Andresen, T. (2021). A Scoping Review of When and How a Child’s View is Weighted in Decision-Making Processes in Law Proceedings. <i>Children and Youth Services Review, 129</i>, 106197. Also available at <a href=https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106197>https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106197</a>.en_US
dc.rights.accessRightsopenAccessen_US
dc.rights.holderCopyright 2023 The Author(s)
dc.subject.courseIDDOKTOR-001
dc.subjectVDP::Social science: 200::Social work: 360en_US
dc.subjectVDP::Samfunnsvitenskap: 200::Sosialt arbeid: 360en_US
dc.titleBarns rett til familieliv etter omsorgsovertakelse. En analyse av Barneverns- og Helsenemndas vekting og fortolkningen_US
dc.typeDoctoral thesisen_US
dc.typeDoktorgradsavhandlingen_US


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