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© British Association of Social Workers
User Empowerment or Family Self-Reliance? The Family Group Conference Model
Carol Lupton is the Director of the Social Services Research and Information Unit at the University of Portsmouth. She has researched and written on many aspects of social and health care policy and practice. In addition to her research on family group conferences, she is currently working on an investigation of the role of health professionals in the child protection process and on consumer involvement in health care commissioning.
Correspondence to Carol Lupton, Social Services Research and Information Unit, University of Portsmouth, Halpern House, 1/2 Hampshire Terrace, Portsmouth PO1 2QF, UK.
Summary
Towards the end of the 1980s, the concept of user empowerment emerged as a central idea in debates about the organization and delivery of health and social care services. Politically attractive to left and right, the concept contains both liberatory and regulatory implications (Baistow, 1994/5). While offering the possibility of greater control and self-determination, it may also involve expectations about increased self-reliance and individual responsibility. Although not inherently contradictory, these different objectives may prove difficult to reconcile if the promotion of self-reliance is primarily driven by a concern to reduce the provision of state services.
This paper sets out to explore the issue of empowerment in the context of the new Family Group Conference (FGC) initiative. Originating in New Zealand (NZ), the FGC model explicitly aims to shift the balance of power between families and professionals within the child-care dicision-making process. Political interest in the model, however, may also be generated by its perceived potential for reducing the dependency of families on state-provided services. Drawing on research from NZ and the UK, the paper examines the quality of empowerment provided by the FGC model from the perspectives of the families involved and sets out to assess the particular balance that obtains within the model between the different and potentially contradictory objectives of promoting user empowerment and encouraging family self-reliance.