Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field

In July of 1996, I was hired by Winnipeg Child and Family Services for a 1 year term as Coordinator of the Mediation Expansion Project. With the agency's permission, I used part of this work as a practicum in order to complete the requirements of a Master of Social Work degree. The principle ob...

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Main Author: Hutton, W. John
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2038
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-20382014-03-29T03:41:44Z Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field Hutton, W. John In July of 1996, I was hired by Winnipeg Child and Family Services for a 1 year term as Coordinator of the Mediation Expansion Project. With the agency's permission, I used part of this work as a practicum in order to complete the requirements of a Master of Social Work degree. The principle objective of the practicum involved the application of mediation and later negotiation--a related skill, to child protection work, in the agency's Central and Northwest Areas. Research for the practicum included an examination of problem-solving versus transformative mediation, issues of culture, the use of mediation with Aboriginal families, and mediating in conflicts where there has been violence. Research was also undertaken in order to develop a process of conflict resolution for use when one is a disputing party in a conflict (negotiation). The overall goal of the practicum was to expand the use mediation within the two areas specified, while utilizing existing staff. The strategy chosen to realize this goal was toenable child protection workers to apply mediation or negotiation as an intervention with clients in the field. To implement the strategy, a 1 day training in mediation or negotiation was developed and offered to line staff, and a set of formal guidelines was developed--the Field Mediation Model and the Field Negotiation Model. The practicum demonstrated that mediation and negotiation can be used as an intervention in the field as part of child protection work, and gave workers models for doing so. In this way, the practicum has moved the practice of mediation away from those designated as mediators into the hands of general practitioners, and has increased the profile of mediation as a social work intervention. 2007-05-22T15:14:00Z 2007-05-22T15:14:00Z 1999-07-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2038 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description In July of 1996, I was hired by Winnipeg Child and Family Services for a 1 year term as Coordinator of the Mediation Expansion Project. With the agency's permission, I used part of this work as a practicum in order to complete the requirements of a Master of Social Work degree. The principle objective of the practicum involved the application of mediation and later negotiation--a related skill, to child protection work, in the agency's Central and Northwest Areas. Research for the practicum included an examination of problem-solving versus transformative mediation, issues of culture, the use of mediation with Aboriginal families, and mediating in conflicts where there has been violence. Research was also undertaken in order to develop a process of conflict resolution for use when one is a disputing party in a conflict (negotiation). The overall goal of the practicum was to expand the use mediation within the two areas specified, while utilizing existing staff. The strategy chosen to realize this goal was toenable child protection workers to apply mediation or negotiation as an intervention with clients in the field. To implement the strategy, a 1 day training in mediation or negotiation was developed and offered to line staff, and a set of formal guidelines was developed--the Field Mediation Model and the Field Negotiation Model. The practicum demonstrated that mediation and negotiation can be used as an intervention in the field as part of child protection work, and gave workers models for doing so. In this way, the practicum has moved the practice of mediation away from those designated as mediators into the hands of general practitioners, and has increased the profile of mediation as a social work intervention.
author Hutton, W. John
spellingShingle Hutton, W. John
Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field
author_facet Hutton, W. John
author_sort Hutton, W. John
title Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field
title_short Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field
title_full Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field
title_fullStr Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field
title_full_unstemmed Application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field
title_sort application of mediation and negotiation to child protection work in the field
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/2038
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