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Relational and cultural continuity for children in foster care; A critical exploration of national policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland

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Relational and cultural continuity for children in foster care; A critical exploration of national policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland. / Tonheim, M.; Raghallaigh, M.N.; Eide, K. et al.
In: Children and Youth Services Review, Vol. 168, 108040, 31.01.2025.

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Tonheim M, Raghallaigh MN, Eide K, Sirriyeh A. Relational and cultural continuity for children in foster care; A critical exploration of national policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland. Children and Youth Services Review. 2025 Jan 31;168:108040. Epub 2024 Nov 26. doi: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2024.108040

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Tonheim, M. ; Raghallaigh, M.N. ; Eide, K. et al. / Relational and cultural continuity for children in foster care; A critical exploration of national policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland. In: Children and Youth Services Review. 2025 ; Vol. 168.

Bibtex

@article{355de396fb8c49a083fecf17fa64841f,
title = "Relational and cultural continuity for children in foster care; A critical exploration of national policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland",
abstract = "Based on an analysis of 14 national child welfare policies, the paper explores how relational and cultural continuity are framed in national foster care policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland, particularly focusing on the implications for children with migrant backgrounds. While most policies tend to recognise the significance of the child's cultural, ethnic, religious and linguistic background, most appear to lack specific guidance of how to ensure relational and cultural continuity of children when placed in foster care. Overall, we find little specific reference to circumstances of children with migrant backgrounds in the policies. The paper critically discusses four patterns. The first is the policies{\textquoteright} emphasis on relational continuity of children's adult relationships over peer relationships. Secondly, there seems to be a strong emphasis on the significance of parental contact, with much less attention to contact with family members like siblings, grandparents and other relatives. With one exception, we observe no reference to transnational family relationships. Thirdly, with little attention to cultural variations, the policies appear to presuppose that everyone share the norms and values of the Western and dominant culture. The last pattern points to an apparent dilemma or a difficult balance between attending to the child's immediate care and safety needs simultaneously as cultural and relational continuity are promoted. {\textcopyright} 2024 The Author(s)",
keywords = "Children with migrant backgrounds, Cultural continuity, Foster care, Policy, Relational continuity, adult, article, child, child welfare, clinical article, cultural anthropology, Denmark, England, family relation, foster care, grandparent, human, Ireland, migrant, Norway, peer group, Scotland, sibling, Sweden",
author = "M. Tonheim and M.N. Raghallaigh and K. Eide and A. Sirriyeh",
year = "2025",
month = jan,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.childyouth.2024.108040",
language = "English",
volume = "168",
journal = "Children and Youth Services Review",
issn = "0190-7409",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Relational and cultural continuity for children in foster care; A critical exploration of national policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland

AU - Tonheim, M.

AU - Raghallaigh, M.N.

AU - Eide, K.

AU - Sirriyeh, A.

PY - 2025/1/31

Y1 - 2025/1/31

N2 - Based on an analysis of 14 national child welfare policies, the paper explores how relational and cultural continuity are framed in national foster care policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland, particularly focusing on the implications for children with migrant backgrounds. While most policies tend to recognise the significance of the child's cultural, ethnic, religious and linguistic background, most appear to lack specific guidance of how to ensure relational and cultural continuity of children when placed in foster care. Overall, we find little specific reference to circumstances of children with migrant backgrounds in the policies. The paper critically discusses four patterns. The first is the policies’ emphasis on relational continuity of children's adult relationships over peer relationships. Secondly, there seems to be a strong emphasis on the significance of parental contact, with much less attention to contact with family members like siblings, grandparents and other relatives. With one exception, we observe no reference to transnational family relationships. Thirdly, with little attention to cultural variations, the policies appear to presuppose that everyone share the norms and values of the Western and dominant culture. The last pattern points to an apparent dilemma or a difficult balance between attending to the child's immediate care and safety needs simultaneously as cultural and relational continuity are promoted. © 2024 The Author(s)

AB - Based on an analysis of 14 national child welfare policies, the paper explores how relational and cultural continuity are framed in national foster care policies in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Ireland and Scotland, particularly focusing on the implications for children with migrant backgrounds. While most policies tend to recognise the significance of the child's cultural, ethnic, religious and linguistic background, most appear to lack specific guidance of how to ensure relational and cultural continuity of children when placed in foster care. Overall, we find little specific reference to circumstances of children with migrant backgrounds in the policies. The paper critically discusses four patterns. The first is the policies’ emphasis on relational continuity of children's adult relationships over peer relationships. Secondly, there seems to be a strong emphasis on the significance of parental contact, with much less attention to contact with family members like siblings, grandparents and other relatives. With one exception, we observe no reference to transnational family relationships. Thirdly, with little attention to cultural variations, the policies appear to presuppose that everyone share the norms and values of the Western and dominant culture. The last pattern points to an apparent dilemma or a difficult balance between attending to the child's immediate care and safety needs simultaneously as cultural and relational continuity are promoted. © 2024 The Author(s)

KW - Children with migrant backgrounds

KW - Cultural continuity

KW - Foster care

KW - Policy

KW - Relational continuity

KW - adult

KW - article

KW - child

KW - child welfare

KW - clinical article

KW - cultural anthropology

KW - Denmark

KW - England

KW - family relation

KW - foster care

KW - grandparent

KW - human

KW - Ireland

KW - migrant

KW - Norway

KW - peer group

KW - Scotland

KW - sibling

KW - Sweden

U2 - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2024.108040

DO - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2024.108040

M3 - Journal article

VL - 168

JO - Children and Youth Services Review

JF - Children and Youth Services Review

SN - 0190-7409

M1 - 108040

ER -