Hearing from justice-involved, care experienced children: what are their experiences of residential care environments and regimes?

IF 1.4 Q2 SOCIAL WORK Journal of Childrens Services Pub Date : 2023-02-08 DOI:10.1108/jcs-02-2022-0011
Anne M. Day, Andrew Clark, N. Hazel
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose The disproportionate representation in juvenile justice systems of children who are, or have been, in the care of the state is a major cause of concern internationally. However, the experiences of this particular group are largely absent from both policy debates and the international research base. This paper aims to correct that deficit by exploring the lived experiences of residential care, justice-involved children. Design/methodology/approach An interpretivist investigation of care experienced children’s perceptions of their experiences, involving semi-structured interviews with a purposive sample of 19 children in England who were simultaneously in residential care and subject to youth justice supervision. Data were analysed using thematic content analysis. Findings Care-experienced children described how their experiences of residential care environments and regimes have undermined their sense of how they see themselves, now and looking to the future. Against this background of disrupted identity, they also reported stigmatising interactions with staff that leave them feeling labelled both as a generic “looked-after child” and as a “bad kid”. Research limitations/implications The findings are based on the perceptions of a group of children in the criminal justice system, which, although reflecting the experiences of those with negative outcomes, may not be representative of all children in residential care. Practical implications The findings have implications for those responsible for the care and development of care-experienced children, as well policymakers concerned with reducing the numbers of care-experienced children in youth justice. Those responsible for the care and development of care-experienced children should consider steps to reduce how factors outlined here disrupt a child’s sense of self and introduce criminogenic labelling and stigma. Originality/value Despite a number of studies seeking to understand why the number of care experienced children in the youth justice system is disproportionate, there is very little empirical work that seeks to understand the experiences and perceptions of children currently both in care and the criminal justice system. This paper seeks to correct this deficit, by detailing how children who are both in residential care and subject to youth justice supervision view their care experiences. The implications of this for policy, practice and further research are then explored.
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听取相关司法人员、有护理经验的儿童的意见:他们对寄宿护理环境和制度有何体验?
目的正在或曾经由国家照顾的儿童在少年司法系统中的比例过高是国际上关注的一个主要原因。然而,这一特定群体的经验在很大程度上没有出现在政策辩论和国际研究基础上。本文旨在通过探索儿童寄宿照料、司法参与的生活体验来纠正这一缺陷。设计/方法/方法一项对护理体验儿童对其经历的感知的解释主义调查,包括对英格兰19名儿童的有目的样本进行半结构化访谈,这些儿童同时接受寄宿护理并接受青少年司法监督。数据采用专题内容分析法进行分析。FindingsCare经验丰富的儿童描述了他们在寄宿护理环境和制度中的经历如何削弱了他们对自己、现在和未来的看法。在这种身份被破坏的背景下,他们还报告了与工作人员的污名化互动,这让他们觉得自己被贴上了“被照顾的孩子”和“坏孩子”的标签。研究局限性/含义这些发现是基于刑事司法系统中一群儿童的看法,尽管反映了那些有负面结果的儿童的经历,但可能并不能代表所有寄宿儿童。实际意义研究结果对那些负责照顾和发展有照顾经验的儿童的人,以及在青年司法中减少有照顾经验儿童数量的政策制定者都有意义。那些负责照顾和发展有照顾经验的儿童的人应该考虑采取措施,减少这里概述的因素如何破坏儿童的自我意识,并引入犯罪标签和污名。独创性/价值尽管有许多研究试图了解为什么青少年司法系统中有护理经验的儿童数量不成比例,但很少有实证研究试图了解目前在护理和刑事司法系统中儿童的经历和看法。本文试图纠正这一缺陷,详细介绍了接受寄宿照顾和接受青少年司法监督的儿童如何看待他们的照顾经历。然后探讨了这对政策、实践和进一步研究的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
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