Children´s Quest for love and Professional child protection work: The case of Norway
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Published version
Date
2016Metadata
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Original version
Neumann CE. Children´s Quest for love and Professional child protection work: The case of Norway. Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care. 2016;15(3):104-123 http://doi.org/10.14324/111.444.ijsp.2017.08Abstract
Central actors in the child
protection field in Norway
argue that children in public
care should not only receive care and support, but also love. It is hard to
disagree that children need love. However, there is reason to question the
situation that may arise if children’s need for love is translated into requirements
that must be safeguarded and handled by child protection workers in the child
protection services. In this article, I analyse this
‘
requirement of love
’
both with
regard to the increased focus on children’s rights in discussions on children’s life
conditions and to the history of the professionalisation of social work; having the
gendered features of social work and its partial professionalisation in mind. Due
to the challenges this requirement represents, there may be good reasons to re
-
visit the
debates on care and care work among feminists who have theorised
care as work within professional contexts. I try to show how the field of social
work and child protection may utilise the critical potential in care feminist
thinking by connecting it to their own emphasis on emotional awareness and
knowledge of self as a prerequisite for professional child protection work