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Creating Child Safe Organisations. Kerryn Boland and Morgan Lander Office of the Children’s Guardian 18 August 2014. Functions of the Children’s Guardian. The OCG is an independent, statutory regulator that: promotes the best interests of children and young people
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Creating Child Safe Organisations Kerryn Boland and Morgan Lander Office of the Children’s Guardian 18 August 2014
Functions of the Children’s Guardian The OCG is an independent, statutory regulator that: • promotes the best interests of children and young people • ensures their rights are safeguarded and promoted • accredits and monitors statutory OOHC agencies • accredits NGO adoption service providers • administers the voluntary out-of-home care system • administers the Working With Children Check and Carers Register • regulates employment of children in certain areas • encourages organisations to become child safe
How do we fulfil our functions? Regulatory tools • Accreditation of out-of-home care and adoption service providers against child-centred standards • Licensing children’s employment – Code of Practice • Working With Children Check – accredit individuals • Compliance systems Education • Encourage organisations to be child safe – training, workshops and resources.
Strengths-based practice System compliance Child-centredoutcome focus Pass/fail Strengths based
Child Safe Organisations • The Working With Children Check is an essential element of child safe – it’s not enough on its own. • Child-focused organisations must understand and reduce the risks of harm to children • Situational crime prevention • Creating safe environments, not safe individuals. • Reduce opportunity and increase effort to offend • Increase risk of detection
Elements of a ‘child safe’ organisation • Systems to ensure continuous improvement • Education and training • Governance and culture • Participation and empowerment of children • Human Resources Management
Practicalities of implementation • Becoming a child safe organisation takes commitment from those at the top • Requires whole-of-organisation approach • Strong leadership • Transparency • Organisational culture is a key determinant of success
Child Safe Case Studies Project • To investigate current ‘child safe’ measures and identify model practice • Outcomes will inform policy and decide role of regulation • Professor Stephen Smallbone advising • 7 organisations from 4 sectors participating
Early insights • One size does not fit all • Policy vs practice vs policy and practice • In every sector there is still some reluctance to: • immediately report suspected abuse without more concrete evidence • immediately report a child’s disclosure or abuse without first observing the worker and child together • Limited understanding of grooming behaviours