Childcare & Safeguarding
Legal framework for child protection, care proceedings, and safeguarding duties under the Children Acts.
Introduction
Childcare and safeguarding law is primarily governed by the Children Act 1989 and the Children Act 2004. The paramount principle is the welfare of the child (s.1 CA 1989). Local authorities have duties to safeguard and promote the welfare of children in their area, to investigate where there is reasonable cause to suspect a child is suffering or likely to suffer significant harm (s.47), and to provide services for children in need (s.17). The court can make care and supervision orders where the threshold criteria are met.
Core Principles
Welfare Principle — The child's welfare is the court's paramount consideration in any decision about their upbringing (s.1 CA 1989).
No Order Principle — The court should not make an order unless it would be better for the child than making no order (s.1(5)).
Parental Responsibility — Rights, duties, powers, and responsibilities a parent has in law in relation to a child. Mothers have automatic PR; fathers acquire it through marriage, registration, agreement, or court order.
Significant Harm — The threshold for care proceedings: the child is suffering or likely to suffer significant harm attributable to the care given or the child being beyond parental control (s.31(2)).
Section 47 Investigations — Local authorities must investigate where they have reasonable cause to suspect a child is suffering or likely to suffer significant harm.
Care and Supervision Orders — Courts can place a child in local authority care (care order) or under supervision (supervision order) if threshold criteria met.
Child Arrangements Orders — Regulate with whom a child lives and spends time (replaced residence and contact orders).
Safeguarding Duties — Local Safeguarding Children Partnerships coordinate safeguarding across agencies (Children Act 2004, as amended).
Key Statutes
Children Act 1989
Children Act 2004
Adoption and Children Act 2002
Leading Cases
Re B (Children)
[2008] UKHL 35
Re H (Minors)
[1996] AC 563
Common Scenarios
Concern about a child's safety
Report to children's social services or police. Under s.47, the local authority must investigate. Emergency protection orders (s.44) or police protection powers (s.46) can remove a child from immediate danger.
Dispute over where a child lives after separation
Apply to court for a child arrangements order. The court applies the welfare principle and the welfare checklist (s.1(3)). Mediation should be attempted first.