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Article
Contextual Adaptation of Family Group Conferencing Model: Early Evidence from Guatemala
British Journal of Social Work (2015)
  • Jini L. Roby, Brigham Young University
  • Joan Pennell, North Carolina State University
  • Karen Rotabi, United Arab Emirates University
  • Kelley McCreery Bunkers, Congressional Research Service
  • Sully de Ucles
Abstract
Guatemala has faced a disproportionate number of children placed outside their families through unethical intercountry adoptions or into large residential settings, jeopardising child and family rights. In response, an international team conducted a pilot training in Guatemala on family group conferencing (FGC) as a means of maintaining children in their homes or with their kin. The training participants were child welfare professionals from government and non-government organisations as well as academics. The training included pre-post assessment of the participants’ grasp of key FGC practices and focus groups on the suitability of the model in a low-wealth country with very limited child welfare resources. In general, participants began and endedwith a relatively elevatedunderstandingofbasic FGC concepts. The focus groups assisted with interpreting these assessment results. According to focus group participants, FGC is culturally compatible with the country’s indigenous Mayan traditions and easily implementable with Guatemalan families. The participants recommended the routine andmulti-sectoralincorporationof themodelincluding by thejudiciary and the attorney general’s office tasked with the ultimate child welfare decision making. Implications include the institutionalisation of the FGC model through national policy, further training for practitioners and research on the model’s efficacy in Guatemala.
Keywords
  • Family group conferencing,
  • child welfare,
  • children’s rights,
  • family decision making,
  • Guatemala child protection,
  • indigenous practices
Publication Date
December, 2015
DOI
10.1093/bjsw/bcu053
Citation Information
Jini L. Roby, Joan Pennell, Karen Rotabi, Kelley McCreery Bunkers, et al.. "Contextual Adaptation of Family Group Conferencing Model: Early Evidence from Guatemala" British Journal of Social Work Vol. 45 Iss. 8 (2015) p. 2281 - 2297
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/karen-rotabi/10/