marginalised fathers research
TRANSCRIPT
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Marginalised fathers
The implications for services January 15th, 2016
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Themes
• What do we know about fathers in families who come to the attention of child protection services?
• What aspects of fathers' lives and situations are relevant to the issues that trouble families and services?
• Thinking about race, class and gender when developing services that are helpful and effective
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The knowledge base • The knowledge base generally is poor but it is possible to say• There is a strong link between deprivation and being subject to child
protection processes • Families are complex with high numbers of non-resident birth fathers and
social fathers • Histories of deprivation and poverty - class, race, ethnicity ….• Mental health and physical health issues• Histories of abuse • Domestic abuse
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The issues we know even less about
• What is going on for men and women in families? • What do they want for and from each other? • What do they think a ‘good relationship’ looks like? • What do they think a ‘good family’ looks like? • What are their views on what supports them in, or stops
them, caring safely?
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What do fathers want from services?
• Reliability • Fairness • Consistency • Time • To be heard
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Thinking about race, class and gender
• Frank• Trevor • Abdul • All three involved in care proceedings where the children had been
permanently removed from their mothers- non-resident fathers with contact • Plan was either adoption or long-term fostering • All three were black men who came to UK from either Africa or the
Caribbean • Immigration status issues
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• All were on low incomes and lived in shared housing • Minimum wage job, seasonal work and one unable to work
because of immigration status
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Trevor
• Afro-Caribbean man • Did not hear about the proceedings until very late in the
day • Seen as having a history of drug abuse and domestic
violence • Reading and scrutinising the files and police records told
a different story
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Frank
• Was refused an assessment because of his lack of history • Non-person • He was in immigration limbo – come as a child so had no
papers • In the paradoxical position of being outside the legal
protection of citizenship, but nevertheless subject to the full force of state power
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Abdul
• Assessment questioned whether his culture/religion would allow him to care for the children
• However he was mainly criticised for not securing suitable housing
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references
• Gupta, A and Featherstone, B (2015) What about my dad? Black fathers and the child protection system, Critical and Radical Social Work,, http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/204986015X14502659300361
• Maxwell, N et al (2012) ‘Engaging fathers in child welfare services: A narrative review of recent research evidence’, Child and Family Social Work, 17,2, 160-169