| Literature DB >> 34232967 |
S J Bedston1, R J Pearson2, M A Jay2, K Broadhurst1, R Gilbert2,3, L Wijlaars2,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: In England, in cases of child maltreatment or neglect, the state can intervene through the family court to remove children from their family home and place them in out-of-home care. The Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service (Cafcass) collects and maintains administrative records of all public family law cases in England. While these national records are primarily used to monitor and manage the workflow of Cafcass teams across England, researchers have re-purposed this data for analysis to understand the drivers and outcomes of public family law intervention. DATA CONTENTS: The administrative dataset is a reflection of the cases Cafcass is involved with and the extent of that involvement. The dataset contains information about the local authority that makes an application to initiate public family law proceedings, the children and families involved, and the duration and details of the case. Between 1 April 2007 and 31 March 2019, Cafcass captured information on approximately 172,100 public family law cases, involving 282,300 children, and 349,600 adults (of which 289,300 are recorded as biological parents). Amongst the information recorded are the relations between adults and children, making it possible for researchers to identify family groups. Additionally, recording practices at Cafcass have improved over time, this has increased the availability of demographic information of all those involved, as well as child's final legal outcome. DATA ACCESS: Researchers can apply to the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage databank (SAIL) for access to the Cafcass pseudonymised administrative data extract, where it is refreshed bi-annually. KEYWORDS: children, out of home care, family relations, family law.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 34232967 PMCID: PMC7482375 DOI: 10.23889/ijpds.v5i1.1159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Popul Data Sci ISSN: 2399-4908
Figure 1: A summary of how the three different national datasets capture children who come into initial contact with children’s services.
Figure 2: Number of parents and children entering public law proceedings over time and local authority variation in the rate of child entry into public law proceedings.
Figure 3: The timelines of a random sample of 100 public law cases based on the Cafcass data extract.| Case and application characteristics | Individual and family member characteristics | Outcomes of application |
| For all public family law proceedings: | For all people named in application: | For all children on cases: |
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Case and application ID Application type (e.g. emergency protection order, care order, supervision order, placement order) Court ID Local Authority ID Date application was made and date ended Date record was closed by Cafcass Dates of hearings attended by Cafcass Guardian |
Person ID Week of birth Gender Ethnicity Lower-layer Super Output Area ID of the address postcode Religion First language Interpreter required (y/n) Disability (y/n) Access support required (y/n) Role in application (subject, party, other) Relationship with other named persons (e.g. child, mother, father, grandparent) |
Legal output ID Legal output type (e.g. emergency protection order, care order, supervision order, placement order, order of no order) Order type (final / interim) Date order made |
Figure 4: Children’s ages and family compositions in public family law proceedings starting in 2017/18.
Figure 5: Legal outcomes for children in public family law proceedings in 2017/18 and how they relate with the age of the child.