Title: Manufacturing Ghost Fathers Fathering and Exclusion in Child Welfare
1Manufacturing Ghost FathersFathering and
Exclusion in Child Welfare
2Who we are
- A research team of Canadian and UK scholars
- Leslie Brown,
- Susan Strega
- Marilyn Callahan,
- Lena Dominelli,
- Christopher Walmsley
- Funded by SSHRC
- Based at the University of Victoria
3Where are the fathers?
- Previous research projects
- Young moms
- Failure to protect
- Grandmothers raising grandchildren
4The research study
- Multiple Data Sources and Methods
- Policy review
- Literature review
- Study of case files (N 282)
- quantitative and qualitative data
- Survey of BSW syllabi (Canadian social work
undergraduate courses) - Qualitative interviews with fathers (11)
- Focus group interviews with practitioners (5)
5How do you get to be a father?
- Through association with a woman who is a mother
- Through behaving in a parental manner
- Through a legal or administrative act
- A contested concept
- (Eichler McCall, 1993)
6What this presentation will address
- Manufacturing Ghost Fathers
- Risks Opportunities for Engaging Fathers
7The First Paradox of fathers in child welfare
- Contemporary popular and professional discourses
promote the involved father - Nonetheless child welfare policies and practices
(Canada, UK, US) promote the uninvolved father
8The Second Paradox
- Fathers exist in the lives of women and children
in child welfare - Fathers are rarely seen by child welfare, even
when present
9Ghost fathers
- I am not a ghost I did go back to school. I
did have a girlfriendWe did become engagedWe
had a child. I havent seen her for two months
10Fathers in child welfare files
- 282 files randomly selected from 476 child
welfare case files in a mid-size Canadian city - 116 files with identified father and documented
child protection concerns
11Fathers in the files
- N 130 fathers identified in child protection
files - 50 of fathers considered a risk to mothers were
not contacted by social workers
12Contact by social workers
Kids
Moms
Moms
Kids
Less than 50 of fathers considered a risk were
contacted by social workers
13The making of ghost fathers
- Policies and administrative practices
-
- Professional practices and discourses
-
- no tradition nor training to see
14Father absence the child welfare policy context
- the concept of risk implemented as the
fundamental organising principle in child
welfare - Gender neutral language
- a gendered division of rights and
responsibilities in regard to child rearing that
is most visible in child welfare (the protective
parent concept)
15Mother blaming and father absence
- Child welfare files routinely referenced in
mothers name - Gender inequity in child welfare extensive and
well documented -
- Workers focus on mothers and ignore fathers and
father figures even when they are the source of
the familys difficulties - Fathers and father figures excluded from
- consideration as caregivers even when state
- guardianship is the alternative
16Protection contracts (Julia Krane 2003)
- Mothers required to act protectively in ways
defined by the state -
- Agreements and orders focus on mothers
inadequacies - Require women to control, monitor and surveil the
actions of men/fathers - Men/fathers not constructed as either protectors
or potential protectors, resources or potential
resources or as responsible for ensuring
childrens safety and well-being
17Father invisibility other contributing policies
and practices
- Definitions of fatherhood
- Social assistance spouse in the house
- Preserving Aboriginal entitlements
- The new Managerialism and the emphasis on
efficiency, standardization, surveillance and
outcomes
18Confirmation from workers
- Its different when caseloads are smaller because
we can be more thorough, but when caseloads are
big, which they usually are, we look for outs and
thats an easy one. BC social worker
19- Theyre trying to get through their cases.
Theyre not making good judgment calls because
its on to the next case. Theyre in a rush.
And theyre devastating the lives of families in
the processits not all men. There are some
women out there that are devastated by child
welfare as well but you know in my experience, I
mean I really felt they ruined my life. (Henry,
research participant.)
20Professional practices
- Failing to hold fathers to account for absence or
violence (not charged with neglect, frequently
violence ignored)
We can monitor, encourage and offer services and
look at whats out there, not that theres loads,
but if they choose not tothen at that point you
have this kind of, we want you to do this
assessment, identify work that you should do as a
guy, but he doesnt have to within those
proceedings. He cant be compelled to do any
assessment for anything. UK social worker
21Professional practices
- Getting rid of him as the intervention option
- When I think of our more successful cases, the
ones the social workers would be pleased with,
they tend to be where the woman has been able to
actually move and with support then change
everything for herself and her children and that
tends to mean separating from him. UK social
worker - Because how were trained is to get rid of the
guy. I think if we can think about repairing the
family dynamic rather than getting rid of
somebody we might think differently, but we find
whatever way we can get rid of him. BC social
worker
22Professional practices
- Professional education
- 33 BSW programs surveyed
- (response rate 66)
- 3 provincial training programs for workers
- 5 of syllabi had fathers content (in 3 programs)
- Consistent with fathers under-representation in
popular parenting literature (4.2, Fleming
Tobin, 2005)
23Biases reflected in these practices
- Gender
- Class
- Race and Culture
-
24Gender bias How fathers are not seen
- Mothers have to break the cycle
- The tradition cycle
- Bad mothers produce bad mothers
- The cycle of violence
- Children who witness/experience
- violence will grow up to be violent or victims
- The partner cycle
- Bad mothers pick bad men
25Father absence and mother blame
- Mothers held responsible for care and protection
of children (e.g. neglect, child sexual abuse) as
well as for nurturing the child-father
relationship - Adolescent pregnancy and parenting focus is on
mothers - Women continue to be blamed for the majority of
problems in families whereas men remain largely
invisible, especially in the field of child
welfare (Risley-Curtiss Heffernan, 2003 395).
26Father absence and mother blame
- It's really difficult when all of your training
and all of the procedures and everything tell you
to go out and be child focused. If you can see
damage happening to a child, you look around and
you find the handy adult who sat there and is
responsible. I mean the mother is responsible.
You hold her responsible. UK social worker
27Father absence and mother blame
- Its up to the mom to protect the children. So
we talk to her only. We believe its the mom, the
custodial parent, its up to her to be protective
- or frequently hes a stepparent. So its up to
her to protect her children. - BC social worker
28Class bias Poor fathers dont count
- Some underlying discourses
- Good fathers are
- good providers
- Underclass discourse on dangerous men
29Race culture bias White western norms
- Some underlying discourses
- Familialism and the ideal family
- Fathers responsibility for care of children
optional, for mothers its not - Racialized discourse on dangerous men
-
-
30I didnt want to be an Aboriginal
- Jacks story of surviving colonizing
- child welfare practices
- every baby she had was theirs
31Being seen
- Act like a middle-class white mother
32Being seenas a risk
- Be confrontational, difficult and demanding with
social workers - Control social workers access to mother and
children
33What is the impact of not seeing fathers?
- For Fathers.
- Not held accountable for their parenting role
- Not held accountable for their behaviour or its
impacts - Not seen nor do they see themselves as a
contributing member of the family
34What is the impact of not seeing fathers?
- For Mothers.
- Fulfill all parenting roles
- Facilitate relationships with children and
fathers - Provide surveillance and civilizing fathers
- Monitor how social systems including child
welfare view and/or do not see fathers
35What is the impact of not seeing fathers?
- For Children.
- Not evident in our data
- Surmise their uncertainty about fathers value
and tendency to ostracize or romanticize fathers
36What is the impact of not seeing fathers?
- For policy makers social workers.
- Able to ignore possible father danger
- Able to ignore possible father resources
- No challenge made to present discourse, policies
and practices
37Ghostbusting towards a father inclusive approach
to practice
- Its time for mother blame to be out of fashion.
- So you know, its like these people need to
start opening up their eyes a little bit more and
looking at our perspective, our point of view
instead of always judging the woman.this old
fashioned thinking doesnt get you nowhere but
old fashioned thinking (Kyle, research
participant). - Avoid holding mothers responsible for monitoring
and controlling mens behaviours. - Seek out and engage with fathers, both as risks
and as assets.
38Engaging fathers Fathers speak
- Working with me, not working at me.
Theyre helping me theyre not against me. So
thats what helped me to become this.
I feel like Im being watched, but thats my
role, Im paranoid.
39Engaging fathers Fathers speak
- Providing concrete resources, support and
information.
Ive had a lot of support to become a
different, a better parent.
She takes one baby maybe I take one baby to sort
of make it easier and stuff like that.
Sit on that couch until child welfare gets
here!
40Engaging fathers Fathers speak
- Being in relationship, keeping fathers informed
and involved.not out in the cold.
I have a relationship with them like the
workers. Like you know they knew me.
I was just another case in their batch of
files that they had.
41A fathers plea to workers
- instead of letting the
- willow bend you know,
- you dont have to snap
- the damn thing in half.
- You can let it bend and
- let it go back and itll
- swing on forever. You
- dont have to snap the
- damn thing to make it
- work.
42Workers speak (1)
- Difficult and challenging to work with fathers.
- Nobody goes anywhere near him. I certainly feel
that about social services. We're always working
with women. The men are out, in the pub, in the
shed, over at their mothers- theyre somewhere
else, arent they? So working really hard to
engage what are fairly scary blokes, they're not
necessarily scary to professionals, but some of
them are, and say to them that their behaviour is
unacceptable and some work needs to be done is
much harder than it sounds, considering that we
do that all the time to women. Social worker
43Workers speak (2)
- Lack of resources for fathers
- I dont want to open up that Pandora's box. BC
social worker - I think its recognised in things like
Working together, recognising that it should
happen, it doesnt actually say how and who
should be doing it and so on. In terms of how
social workers are able to do that on top of
everything else that theyve got to do, and about
whether weve got the skills to do that UK
social worker - I think often men in families continue to be
on the periphery and we continue to keep them
there for all sorts of reasons. UK social
worker
44Workers speak (3)
- Getting rid of father in one family means he will
just fetch up in another - Most of them walk away and go off to find new
families. Theres lots of times I meet the mom
and shell say he did the same thing to his last
family. Shell even have a copy of the
restraining order that he brought with him from
the other relationship. BC social worker
45Workers speak (4)
- Workers want policy change that supports working
with fathers - We can monitor, encourage and offer services and
look at whats out there, not that theres loads,
but if they choose not tothen at that point you
have this kind of, we want you to do this
assessment, identify work that you should do as a
guy, but he doesnt have to within those
proceedings. He cant be compelled to do any
assessment for anything. UK social worker
46Policy legislative reform
- Eliminate failure to protect as a category
- Develop policies that encourage engaging safe
fathers or those who can become safer. - Compulsory registration of birth fathers?
- Apply a gender lens to legislation and policy
- Actively pursue social policies that better
resource disadvantaged single mothers
47Principles and practice strategies
- First Practice Strategy
- Acknowledge their presence
- First Principle
- Acknowledge their existence
48Principles and practice strategies
- Second Practice Strategy
-
- Be strengths-focused
-
- Second Principle
- Understand there are many different ways to be a
father
49Principles and practice strategies
- Third Practice Strategy
-
- Respectful practice involves holding fathers
accountable -
- Third Principle
- Violence does not necessarily eliminate men from
being involved as fathers, but it must be taken
up directly with them
50Principles and practice strategies
- Fourth Practice Strategy
-
- Provide support to enable fathers to take
responsibility -
- Fourth Principle
- Fathers are responsible for their children
51Principles and practice strategies
- Fifth Principle
- Understand the context (practice
anti-oppressively)
- Fifth Practice Strategy
-
- Be knowledgeable about structural contexts and
how location affects father involvement -
52A wish for care and respect
- They could have given me the respect.
- They did their jobs. You know they certainly
didnt go an extra mile. - Its caring instead of business-like caring
where you have to care, she wants to care.