Everybody's business? A research review of the informal safeguarding of other people's children in the UK

The paper reviews public discourses and research on the safeguarding of other people’s children by adults at the neighbourhood level. There is much empirical evidence pointing to the existence of thriving informal communities of support and informal childcare for parents across the social classes. There appears to be less empirical evidence related to intervening with children and young people who may be at risk. Nonetheless, the limited evidence suggests that many neighbours, acquaintances and strangers do intervene, or say that they would. The paper concludes by considering the potential negative consequences of promoting the notion that safeguarding children is ‘everybody’s business’.

[1]  Sue White,et al.  Performing ‘Initial Assessment’: Identifying the Latent Conditions for Error at the Front-Door of Local Authority Children's Services , 2010 .

[2]  J. Appleton Researching childhood harm: methodological issues , 2010 .

[3]  G. Hogg,et al.  Family Comes First or Open All Hours?: How Low Paid Women Working in Food Retailing Manage Webs of Obligation at Home and Work , 2008 .

[4]  Val Gillies Childrearing, Class and the New Politics of Parenting , 2008 .

[5]  S. Ball,et al.  Childcare, choice and social class: Caring for young children in the UK , 2008 .

[6]  P. Raina,et al.  An ethnography of low-income mothers' safeguarding efforts. , 2008, Journal of safety research.

[7]  M. Whitehead,et al.  Can I risk using public services? Perceived consequences of seeking help and health care among households living in poverty: qualitative study , 2007, Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

[8]  V. Caputo She's From a `Good Family' , 2007 .

[9]  C. Skinner,et al.  Lone Parents and Informal Childcare: A Tax Credit Childcare Subsidy? , 2006 .

[10]  C. Fagan,et al.  Place, Class and Local Circuits of Reproduction: Exploring the Social Geography of Middle-class Childcare in London , 2006 .

[11]  Isabella Boyce,et al.  Neighbourliness and Privacy on a Low Income Estate , 2006 .

[12]  Nigel R. Parton "Every child matters": The shift to prevention whilst strengthening protection in children's services in England , 2006 .

[13]  Juan Herrero,et al.  Perceived neighborhood social disorder and residents' attitudes toward reporting child physical abuse. , 2006, Child abuse & neglect.

[14]  S. Ryan ‘People don't do odd, do they?’ mothers making sense of the reactions of others towards their learning disabled children in public places , 2005 .

[15]  A. Gray,et al.  The Changing Availability of Grandparents as Carers and its Implications for Childcare Policy in the UK , 2005, Journal of Social Policy.

[16]  P. Attree,et al.  Parenting support in the context of poverty: a meta-synthesis of the qualitative evidence. , 2005, Health & social care in the community.

[17]  S. Nelson,et al.  The Craigmillar project: neighbourhood mapping to improve children's safety from sexual crime , 2004 .

[18]  R. Edwards,et al.  Support in Parenting: Values and Consensus concerning who to turn to , 2004, Journal of Social Policy.

[19]  R. Atkinson,et al.  Order Born of Chaos? The Capacity for Informal Social Control in Disempowered and 'Disorganised' Neighbourhoods , 2004 .

[20]  H. Blackford Playground Panopticism , 2004 .

[21]  S. Ball,et al.  The social geography of childcare: making up a middle‐class child , 2004 .

[22]  L. Bensley,et al.  Community Responses and Perceived Barriers to Responding to Child Maltreatment , 2004, Journal of Community Health.

[23]  Nigel R. Parton From Maria Colwell to Victoria Climbié: reflections on public inquiries into child abuse a generation apart , 2004 .

[24]  K. Broadhurst,et al.  Engaging parents and carers with family support services: What can be learned from research on help‐seeking? , 2003 .

[25]  R. Edwards,et al.  Motherhood, Paid Work and Partnering: Values and Theories , 2003 .

[26]  Jane Wheelock,et al.  ‘Grandparents Are the Next Best Thing’: Informal Childcare for Working Parents in Urban Britain , 2002, Journal of Social Policy.

[27]  J. Halliday,et al.  Amongst Women: Exploring the Reality of Rural Childcare , 2001 .

[28]  S. Holloway Local Childcare Cultures: Moral geographies of mothering and the social organisation of pre-school education , 1998 .

[29]  Gill Valentine,et al.  A safe place to grow up? Parenting, perceptions of children's safety and the rural idyll , 1997 .

[30]  G. Valentine ”Oh Yes I Can.”“Oh No You Can't”: Children and Parents' Understandings of Kids' Competence to Negotiate Public Space Safely , 1997 .

[31]  E. Munro Avoidable and Unavoidable Mistakes in Child Protection Work , 1996 .

[32]  C. Coulton,et al.  The Role of Neighbors and the Government in Neighborhood‐Based Child Protection , 1996 .

[33]  Eileen Baldry,et al.  Neighbourhoods, Networks and Child Abuse , 1996 .

[34]  J. Garbarino,et al.  High-risk neighborhoods and high-risk families: the human ecology of child maltreatment. , 1980, Child development.