Journeys to identity: why care records matter

Care experienced people often find themselves applying for their care records in search of answers — to address gaps and inconsistencies in the knowledge they hold about their childhoods and personal development, which may in turn affect their broader senses of self. This article, written from our o...

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Main Authors: Laura Brown, David Grimm, Gregor Clunie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: CELCIS 2020-06-01
Series:Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
Subjects:
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author Laura Brown
David Grimm
Gregor Clunie
author_facet Laura Brown
David Grimm
Gregor Clunie
author_sort Laura Brown
collection DOAJ
description Care experienced people often find themselves applying for their care records in search of answers — to address gaps and inconsistencies in the knowledge they hold about their childhoods and personal development, which may in turn affect their broader senses of self. This article, written from our own lived experiences, provides a commentary on a system of writing, accessing and reading records which is not aligned to the circumstances and purposes of care experienced people and which indeed frequently disempowers and (re-)traumatises. We share our experiences of applying for and reading our records, as an adoptee and as a care experienced person. We also draw on the discussions and experiences of a Who Cares? Scotland care records campaign group. This commentary reveals the power imbalance at the heart of record keeping where the rights to memory, identity, and childhood are effectively questioned. It also makes suggestions for future practice. It asks for a complete rethinking of how care records are regarded by professionals and the sector, advocating for a shift in power as regards the production and control of information and a significant improvement in the care offered to those of us who choose to access it.
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publishDate 2020-06-01
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series Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
spelling doaj-art-6f640de67d8d4e0ca26d3b703b74f1442025-08-20T02:34:24ZengCELCISScottish Journal of Residential Child Care2976-93532020-06-01192526310.17868/strath.00084261Journeys to identity: why care records matterLaura BrownDavid GrimmGregor ClunieCare experienced people often find themselves applying for their care records in search of answers — to address gaps and inconsistencies in the knowledge they hold about their childhoods and personal development, which may in turn affect their broader senses of self. This article, written from our own lived experiences, provides a commentary on a system of writing, accessing and reading records which is not aligned to the circumstances and purposes of care experienced people and which indeed frequently disempowers and (re-)traumatises. We share our experiences of applying for and reading our records, as an adoptee and as a care experienced person. We also draw on the discussions and experiences of a Who Cares? Scotland care records campaign group. This commentary reveals the power imbalance at the heart of record keeping where the rights to memory, identity, and childhood are effectively questioned. It also makes suggestions for future practice. It asks for a complete rethinking of how care records are regarded by professionals and the sector, advocating for a shift in power as regards the production and control of information and a significant improvement in the care offered to those of us who choose to access it.care experienced peoplecare recordsidentitywho cares? scotlandsubject access requests
spellingShingle Laura Brown
David Grimm
Gregor Clunie
Journeys to identity: why care records matter
Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care
care experienced people
care records
identity
who cares? scotland
subject access requests
title Journeys to identity: why care records matter
title_full Journeys to identity: why care records matter
title_fullStr Journeys to identity: why care records matter
title_full_unstemmed Journeys to identity: why care records matter
title_short Journeys to identity: why care records matter
title_sort journeys to identity why care records matter
topic care experienced people
care records
identity
who cares? scotland
subject access requests
work_keys_str_mv AT laurabrown journeystoidentitywhycarerecordsmatter
AT davidgrimm journeystoidentitywhycarerecordsmatter
AT gregorclunie journeystoidentitywhycarerecordsmatter