Helland Hege Stein
Centre for Research on Discretion and Paternalism, Department of Government, University of Bergen, Norway.
Child Abuse Negl. 2025 Apr;162(Pt 1):107077. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2024.107077. Epub 2024 Oct 15.
Balancing children's right to participate and their need for protection constitutes a core dilemma in child protection. The CRC obligates states to facilitate and ensure participation for all children, regardless of age and maturity. Still, children are repeatedly excluded from child protection proceedings on paternalistic grounds, even in the child-centric and child-rights-oriented Nordic countries.
From a policy theory perspective, this study explores the participation-protection dilemma by investigating Nordic citizens' attitudes towards children's participation and need for protection. Specifically, it examines how children's age and type of maltreatment affect these attitudes.
Survey data from a representative sample of the populations in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden (N = 5073).
The study utilises an experimental survey methodology, using a between-subjects factorial vignette design. The child's age (5 or 15 years) and type of maltreatment exposure (sexual violence, physical violence, or emotional neglect) are systematically varied across the vignettes randomly assigned to the population.
Nordic citizens support children's participation in child protection, but country differences exist. There is less support for participation for younger children and higher levels of protective attitudes. The type of maltreatment did not matter for citizens' assessment of participation. However, citizens are more protective towards children exposed to emotional neglect, especially younger children.
Children's right to participate is widely accepted in the Nordic population, yet normative barriers persist. The study sheds light on the paradox of persisting violation of children's participatory rights despite supportive national policies and legal structures that facilitate implementation.
平衡儿童的参与权与他们的保护需求构成了儿童保护中的一个核心困境。《儿童权利公约》要求各国促进并确保所有儿童的参与,无论其年龄和成熟程度如何。然而,即使在以儿童为中心且注重儿童权利的北欧国家,儿童仍因家长式的理由而屡屡被排除在儿童保护程序之外。
从政策理论的角度来看,本研究通过调查北欧公民对儿童参与和保护需求的态度,探讨参与 - 保护困境。具体而言,研究考察儿童的年龄和虐待类型如何影响这些态度。
来自丹麦、芬兰、冰岛、挪威和瑞典具有代表性样本的调查数据(N = 5073)。
本研究采用实验性调查方法,采用组间析因 vignette 设计。在随机分配给人群的 vignette 中,系统地改变儿童的年龄(5岁或15岁)和所遭受的虐待类型(性暴力、身体暴力或情感忽视)。
北欧公民支持儿童参与儿童保护,但存在国家差异。对年幼儿童参与的支持较少,保护态度更强。虐待类型对公民对参与的评估没有影响。然而,公民对遭受情感忽视的儿童,尤其是年幼儿童,保护意识更强。
儿童的参与权在北欧民众中得到广泛认可,但规范障碍依然存在。该研究揭示了尽管有支持性的国家政策和有助于实施的法律结构,但儿童参与权仍持续受到侵犯这一矛盾现象。