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Holding it together? professional perspectives on the role of relationships when relocating young people due to extra-familial harm

  • Carlene Firmin
    ,
  • Rachael Owens
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Open access

Abstract

When young people come to harm in extra-familial contexts, professionals may move them a distance from their home community to protect them, and in doing so disrupt relationships in which they have encountered harm. However, relocations can also fracture young people’s protective relationships with family, peers, and professionals; relationships that have been positioned as targets for intervention in cases of extra-familial harm. The extent to which these relationships are considered during relocations is under-explored. Utilising semi-structured interviews with 16 social work professionals in England and Wales, we assessed their accounts of using relationships prior to, during, and following relocations in cases of extra-familial harm. Three themes emerged: using relationships during relocations to provide consistency, to collaborate, and to create safety. Professional accounts prioritised young people’s relationships with practitioners, over relationships with families, peers, and their wider communities, when using/seeking opportunities to offer consistency and to collaborate on safety plans. They also depicted a struggle to engage with the complex web of family, peer, and community relationships associated to young people’s protection in both their home communities and those they had been moved to; relationships that were critical for creating safety. Implications for practice and future research are discussed, highlighting the potential merits of offering integrated research and practice frameworks that hold together young people’s relationships with families, peers, communities, and professionals, in response to extra-familial harm.

Publication Information

Output type

Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Original language

English

Pages from-to (Number of pages)

Pages 231-255 (25 pages)

Journal (Volume, Issue Number)

International Journal on Child Maltreatment: Research, Policy and Practice (Volume 5, Issue 2)

Publication milestones

  • Accepted/In press - 21/11/2021
  • Published - 21/12/2021

Publication status

Published - 21/12/2021

ISSN

2524-5236

External Publication IDs

  • Scopus: 85164766359