Introduction to gatekeeping

CELCIS - University of Strathclyde & International Inter-Agency MOOC

This video appears in Week 1 of the online course Getting Care Right for All Children: Implementing the UN Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children, hosted by CELCIS at the University of Strathclyde on FutureLearn as part of an International Inter-Agency MOOC.

Introduction to gatekeeping

In this video, Florence Martin, Director of the Better Care Network, and Delia Pop, Director of Programmes and Global Advocacy for Hope and Homes for Children, sit down together to discuss the concept of “gatekeeping” in relation to children’s care, the role it plays in ensuring informed and appropriate decisions about children’s care, and how it operates in practice in different contexts and stages.

Florence and Delia explain what gatekeeping is, its place in implementing the UN Guidelines for the Alternative Care of Children and, what it looks like in practice using examples from a number of countries and contexts. They tell us about what lessons have been learnt regarding operationalising gatekeeping, and in particular, what key elements have been identified as essential to making gatekeeping effective. Florence and Delia provide concrete examples of the way gatekeeping can operate at different stages of a child’s involvement with the child welfare system, from responding to first concerns and preventing unnecessary separation to ensuring successful reintegration of a child into his or her family, or the provision of a stable, safe and nurturing alternative care option.

The particular role gatekeeping plays in reforms of child care and protection systems, especially to support a process of deinstitutionalisation and a shift towards more appropriate family based options is also discussed. Other questions explored include how gatekeeping can work to ensure limited resources are better directed and managed to respond to the needs of children and their families; what the challenges are in establishing and maintaining an effective gatekeeping system; and how children and their families can be actively involved in shaping gatekeeping systems, with examples from Moldova, Rwanda, and Indonesia, among others.

In this video, we hear a lot of information about the different elements of gatekeeping. As we go through the course we will discuss these different topics in more detail.

To enroll in a future offering of Getting Care Right for All Children, or to view this video on the FutureLearn website, click here

Video file
Introduction to Gatekeeping