FOSTER CARE: YES OR NO? THE DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES OF SOCIAL WORKERS RENDERING FOSTER CARE SERVICES

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15270/59-1-1093

Keywords:

decisions, decision-making process, intuition, analytical, social worker, foster care, foster child, foster parent

Abstract

Decisions made by social workers play a crucial role in foster care. Despite the challenging conditions under which social workers work in South Africa, they continue to make decisions to place children in foster care. There is a lack of research on the decision-making processes of social workers rendering foster care services. A need to understand what decisions are made and how these decisions are made prompted this study. A qualitative approach was applied using the multiple case study design, with explorative, descriptive and contextual designs. Most social workers make decisions using a mix of intuition and empirical evidence, justifying the child's best interest as the basis for their decisions. This study contributes to the knowledge of the decision-making processes of social workers rendering foster care services. This knowledge can enable social workers to be consciously aware of their own decision-making processes during all the phases of rendering foster care services, facilitating transparent decision-making, with the best outcome for the foster child and his/her biological and foster family.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Pathamavathy Naicker, South African Social Security Agency

1General Manager of Monitoring and Evaluation at the South African Social Security Agency

Petro Botha, University of South Africa

University of South Africa - UNISA

Downloads

Published

2023-04-18

How to Cite

Naicker, P. ., & Botha, P. . (2023). FOSTER CARE: YES OR NO? THE DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES OF SOCIAL WORKERS RENDERING FOSTER CARE SERVICES. Social Work/Maatskaplike Werk, 59(1), 58–77. https://doi.org/10.15270/59-1-1093

Issue

Section

Articles