Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of Ireland

This paper documents a summary of research which was conducted as part of the requirements for the completion of an MA in Child, Family and Community Studies at Dublin Institute of Technology. The aim of the study was twofold; to explore the practices of residential child care centre managers in vet...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Catherine Hanly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CELCIS 2010-10-01
Series:Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841536328958738432
author Catherine Hanly
author_facet Catherine Hanly
author_sort Catherine Hanly
collection DOAJ
description This paper documents a summary of research which was conducted as part of the requirements for the completion of an MA in Child, Family and Community Studies at Dublin Institute of Technology. The aim of the study was twofold; to explore the practices of residential child care centre managers in vetting staff for employment in residential child care, and to explore the attitudes of these managers towards current vetting requirements in the Republic of Ireland. A wide range of literature exists documenting all aspects of residential care provision for young people under the age of eighteen in state care. The material examined for the purposes of this research covers both Irish and UK perspectives as well as international practice and experience in the area. This literature has consistently highlighted the particular vulnerability of this group of young people. Also highlighted in within the literature is the need for a range of safeguarding measures for these young people because of this identified vulnerability. Not least amongst these measures are comprehensive vetting practices which have been highlighted particularly through various Inquiry reports both in the UK and Ireland (Warner, 1992; Department of Health, 1994; Department of Health 1996; Corby et al., 2001). The literature review undertaken for this study demonstrated that there has been little direct research conducted on vetting either in Ireland or elsewhere and, in particular research that examines the views of those responsible for this task.
format Article
id doaj-art-50b888b24b9b437aa2749047271f79c4
institution Kabale University
issn 2976-9353
language English
publishDate 2010-10-01
publisher CELCIS
record_format Article
series Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
spelling doaj-art-50b888b24b9b437aa2749047271f79c42025-01-14T16:43:29ZengCELCISScottish Journal of Residential Child Care2976-93532010-10-019210.17868/strath.00085328Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of IrelandCatherine HanlyThis paper documents a summary of research which was conducted as part of the requirements for the completion of an MA in Child, Family and Community Studies at Dublin Institute of Technology. The aim of the study was twofold; to explore the practices of residential child care centre managers in vetting staff for employment in residential child care, and to explore the attitudes of these managers towards current vetting requirements in the Republic of Ireland. A wide range of literature exists documenting all aspects of residential care provision for young people under the age of eighteen in state care. The material examined for the purposes of this research covers both Irish and UK perspectives as well as international practice and experience in the area. This literature has consistently highlighted the particular vulnerability of this group of young people. Also highlighted in within the literature is the need for a range of safeguarding measures for these young people because of this identified vulnerability. Not least amongst these measures are comprehensive vetting practices which have been highlighted particularly through various Inquiry reports both in the UK and Ireland (Warner, 1992; Department of Health, 1994; Department of Health 1996; Corby et al., 2001). The literature review undertaken for this study demonstrated that there has been little direct research conducted on vetting either in Ireland or elsewhere and, in particular research that examines the views of those responsible for this task. social careresidential child carechild abuserepublic of ireland
spellingShingle Catherine Hanly
Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of Ireland
Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
social care
residential child care
child abuse
republic of ireland
title Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of Ireland
title_full Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of Ireland
title_fullStr Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of Ireland
title_full_unstemmed Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of Ireland
title_short Practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children's residential centres in the Republic of Ireland
title_sort practices in and attitudes towards staff vetting in children s residential centres in the republic of ireland
topic social care
residential child care
child abuse
republic of ireland
work_keys_str_mv AT catherinehanly practicesinandattitudestowardsstaffvettinginchildrensresidentialcentresintherepublicofireland