This thesis focuses on interagency coordination and collaboration in the management of child
sexual abuse in Australia and in England. The impetus for the research arose from the
experience of the author as manager and practitioner in the area of child sexual abuse, while
working in these two countries. Problems regarding the management of interagency
cooperation had become apparent in child protection practice and were also recognized in the
literature. Personal experience, as well as a review of the literature, revealed that there was a
need for the identification and validation of the key mechanisms and processes underlying
effective interagency coordination and collaboration. This review of the literature also
indicated that although existing models of operation had been identified, their value to
practitioners had not been evaluated.
The research underpinning the thesis set out to identify and validate key components
contributing to effective interagency cooperation in the management of child sexual abuse that
could be of international significance. This research is placed in the context of the evolving
social construction of child abuse and child sexual abuse that is refiected in the rise in the
incidence of the phenomena as well as in its expanding definitions. The nature of adult/child
relationships are explored in terms of the sociological constructions of childhood and their
periodisation. Specific attention is given to the rights of children and the professional
regulation of child abuse and child sexual abuse in relation to the periodisation of modernity
and postmodernity.
Child abuse management operated mainly within the medical paradigm between the 1960s
and the late 1980s. In England, child abuse tragedies occurred during the 1980s that resulted
in official inquiries and culminated in various governmental reports that made
recommendations for the improvement in services. The child sexual abuse scandal that
occurred in Cleveland in 1986 was accompanied by a moral panic and a backlash in society
against social workers and existing methods of professional regulation. As a consequence of
Governmental efforts to remedy this situation, the medical paradigm that had dominated 'child
abuse management' was shifted towards a socio-legal paradigm accompanied by the
emergence of the discourse of 'child protectionism'. However, challenges to the child
protection discourse continued and these appear to be centred mainly upon the need for the
adoption of a more subjectivist paradigm in the management of these phenomena. The
debates and issues arising from these shifts in paradigm, particularly in relation to the
operation of the interagency, multidisciplinary approach to the management of the problem,
are discussed in the context of the self-referential, closed social systems involved in child
protection network.
Amidst these changes to service delivery paradigms concerning child welfare, the underlying
multiagency interagency method of operation continued to be advocated. Existing research
had pointed to the central role of this method of working in the management of child sexual
abuse. An eclectically designed study was undertaken to validate the key mechanisms and
processes underlying interagency coordination and collaboration. After their identification, it
was found that they could be categorised into coordinating mechanisms, collaborative
procedures and personal perspectives. These key components were then operationalised to
form a questionnaire that was administered to a random sample of four-hundred and seven
social worker practitioners and managers in both Australia and England. This was followed
up with twenty in-depth interviews with a randomly selected sample of social work managers
and practitioners from Australia and England chosen from those who had participated in the
original survey.
The major finding from a statistical analysis of the results of the survey, and discourse
analysis of the in-depth interviews, indicated that the operationalised components were key
mechanisms and procedures in the management of child sexual abuse in both Australia and
England. A significant outcome from these findings has been the development and integration
of the key mechanisms into a model of interagency coordination and collaboration. The
model has been termed, the Interagency Model for the Management of Child Sexual Abuse
(IAAC). The Model's functions are outlined, together with recommendations for its practical
application for the planning of child protection services as well as the training of child
protection teams.
The final chapter contains specific recommendations for child protection practice, in the light
of the research findings, together with their possible implications for the contemporary child
protection discourse. Suggestions are made regarding future directions for child protection
practice, also based on the research results, together with proposals for future research.
Date of Award | 2001 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
INTERAGENCY COORDINATION AND COLLABORATION IN THE MANAGEMENT OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE: IN AUSTRALIAN AND ENGLAND
LAWRENCE, A. M. (Author). 2001
Student thesis: PhD