A conceptual model to guide collaborative reflective practice and values-driven child welfare decision-making

•Decision-making is the most critical function performed in child welfare.•There are few antiracist frameworks to reduce disproportionalities and disparities.•The proposed model aims to yield more equitable outcomes for BIPOC families.•We integrate values-driven decision-making with collaborative re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Children and youth services review 2022-12, Vol.143, p.106681, Article 106681
Hauptverfasser: Godoy, Sarah, Kainz, Kirsten, Brevard, Kanisha, Keyes, Oprah
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container_start_page 106681
container_title Children and youth services review
container_volume 143
creator Godoy, Sarah
Kainz, Kirsten
Brevard, Kanisha
Keyes, Oprah
description •Decision-making is the most critical function performed in child welfare.•There are few antiracist frameworks to reduce disproportionalities and disparities.•The proposed model aims to yield more equitable outcomes for BIPOC families.•We integrate values-driven decision-making with collaborative reflective practice.•This process may improve interactions between caseworkers and families. Child welfare professionals make critical decisions at every stage of a family’s involvement with the child welfare system. Values, both explicit and implicit, play a meaningful role in complex decisions related to safety, foster care, well-being, and permanency. The promise of critical reflective practice and values-driven decision-making offers a stronger application of social work values which may in turn promote systems change efforts that endeavor to advance more equitable outcomes for children and families. This conceptual article discusses the role of social work values and principles in supporting decision-making efforts aimed at protecting children and reducing racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disproportionalities in child and family outcomes. We present a three-point conceptual model and use the structured decision-making model as an example for how child welfare agencies can include values and collaborative reflective practice in decision-making within the child welfare system.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.childyouth.2022.106681
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Child protection
Child welfare
Children
Collaboration
Conceptual models
Decision making
Decision making models
Families & family life
Foster care
Occupational roles
Professional practice
Reflective practice
Social values
Social work
Social work values
Value-driven
Well being
Work values
title A conceptual model to guide collaborative reflective practice and values-driven child welfare decision-making
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