1. Introduction
In Western societies, two ideologies of child welfare, namely, family support and child protection, have shaped social work practices with children and their families [
1,
2,
3]. Family support can be seen as services and interventions that strengthen parents’ abilities to care for their children, whereas child protection interventions aim to identify and protect children from abuse and neglect [
2]. Gilbert et al. also identified a third “child-focused” orientation, which contains features of child protection and family support but concentrates on the child as an agent who has an independent relation to the state [
4] (p. 252).
In this paper, we highlight the child welfare system in Lithuania as a post-Soviet country with a relatively young, thirty-year history of developing child and family services. The research is grounded on Gilbert and the international research team’s child welfare study [
2], which substantiates the problem frame, the aim and the mode of intervention, and the parent–state relationship as the main dimensions for analysing configurations of a child welfare system. The Lithuanian context provides a unique setting for analyzing how abstract models developed by Gilbert et al. [
2] and concrete professional practices interact with each other. We continue research discussions on how child welfare problems are perceived by professionals [
5,
6,
7] and address the lack of knowledge about how child welfare ideologies work in Central and Eastern European countries.
In this paper, we aim to link the concept of child welfare used by Gilbert et al. [
2] with the concept of social sustainability to discuss child rights as a bridge between child welfare and social sustainability concepts. Concerning the social sustainability concept, we refer to the concept of Hämäläinen, Pihlainen, and Vornanen that “social sustainability can be linked to the alleviation of poverty and promoting participation, inclusion, cultural identity, institutional stability, and social cohesion” (p. 2), and also that “child welfare is an essential element of sustainable social development, even sustainable development in general” [
8] (p. 15). In our paper, we adhere to the authors’ idea that “social sustainability ultimately refers to recognizing the children’s rights” [
8] (p. 15).
It is broadly recognized that individual actors can offer a front-line perspective on how child welfare problems are perceived and handled in daily practice [
5,
6,
7]. The authors of the present paper considered the remark of Biesel et al. that the analysis of regulatory frameworks has “not necessarily … been evident in practice” [
9] (pp. 18–19). The link between conceptual frameworks and empirical observations of child welfare practice enabled the researchers to portray the configuration of the child welfare system in Lithuania, which integrates child protection, family services, and child-focused orientations of child welfare, around child welfare dimensions such as the problem frame, the aim and the mode of intervention, and the relationship between the state and parents, as proposed by Gilbert et al. [
2].
In this paper, we present research findings on how the child welfare system, with reference to the problem frame, the aim and the mode of intervention, and the parent–state relationship, is observed in everyday professional practice in Lithuania by linking it with the social sustainability concept. The analysis provides meaningful empirical grounds for a link between the social sustainability of child and family welfare policy and practice in Lithuania. Our discussion provides input for research “on child protection systems and child and family policy promoting social sustainability” [
8] (p. 15) that considers the national context. Schoch et al. noted that the development of sustainable child protection “provides effective support for children and parents, guaranteeing their integrity by allowing for the interaction of mutual recognition and making sufficient information available to the persons concerned for full participation in the child protection system“ [
10] (p. 15).
1.1. Orientations to Child and Family Welfare
Numerous studies have been interested in how the child welfare system aims to tackle child abuse and promote families’ well-being [
1,
2,
5,
11,
12]. Child welfare is connected to the broader societal and political settings and includes areas such as material situation, housing, health, subjective well-being of the child and family, education, child relationships, civic participation, risk, and safety. What lies behind child welfare outcomes is the interaction between resources and risk factors operating in the child’s personal life, in his or her family, school, or the wider society [
13]. International treaties, such as the Convention of the Rights of the Child (CRC) of the United Nations, the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and subsequently the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (SDG), national policy programs, and laws affect the composition of the child welfare system and the professional practices it contains. Countries have different approaches to addressing the needs of parents and children in vulnerable situations through policies, legislation, and services [
9,
11,
12,
14].
Gilbert [
1,
2,
11] could be named as a pioneer in this area in the USA, and Parton [
15,
16,
17] as a European scholar who has analyzed child protection policies and practices in England and internationally over the last thirty years. The first comparative study led by Gilbert [
1] analyzed child protection systems in nine countries (Belgium, Canada, Denmark, England, Finland, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, and the USA). The mentioned research revealed the two ideological orientations: family support and child protection. This comparative research was repeated later [
2]. In addition to all original countries, it included Norway. The researchers described the basic features of child protection systems based on Esping-Andersen’s [
18] conventional typology of welfare state regimes and outlined the legislative reforms related to child abuse. Additionally, they defined policy developments and their implications for reorienting child protection systems and promoting child welfare. The research showed that child welfare systems had expanded during the 15 years after the original comparison in all countries. Moreover, the approaches to how children are protected from abuse and maltreatment had become more complex, hence the two original orientations—child protection and family service—did not cover the multifaceted reality, and they conceptualized a new child-focused orientation. The authors provided a table summarizing the findings of orientations—Child Protection, Family Service, Child-Focused—and their transpiring dimensions, namely the driver for intervention, the role of the state, the problem frame, the mode of intervention, the aim of intervention, state–parent relationship, and the balance of rights. They point out that orientations can be seen as a continuum and as a three-dimensional framework when countries do not portray pure orientations but “fall within a framework—closer to some planes than others” [
4] (pp. 255–256).
From the international research group, Parton [
17] has continued theoretical, system-level analysis and developed a typology based on two value dimensions—Individualism and Collectivism, and Authoritarianism and Permissiveness. Authoritative Individualism is very similar to Gilbert, Parton, and Skivenes’ child protection orientation, and Permissive Individualism is close to family service orientation [
4]. Authoritarian Collectivism focuses on intervening in and regulating collective societal behavior toward children and young people and the role of the state is focused on regulating communities and organizations. Permissive Collectivism emphasizes the support of communities to improve children’s well-being; it also downplays the role of the state. As Connolly et al. point out, developing typologies of child protection systems is important because it may “facilitate discussion about the objectives and performance of such systems; and … inform choices about the way in which a particular system will develop” [
14] (p. 1).
Overall, as previous research shows, states have come a long way in designing and developing child welfare systems. Kahn [
19] and Ben-Arieh [
20] termed this development as a path from the desire to save the child’s life by seeking to ensure the child’s development of “here and now”. The modern concept of child welfare is defined by the implementation of the principles embedded in the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
1.2. The Convention on the Rights of the Child of the United Nations
The development of family and child welfare systems has been strongly inspired by the adoption of The Convention on the Rights of the Child (herein after the CRC) in 1989 by the General Assembly of the United Nations [
21]. The CRC heralded a new epoch about how the state’s parties of the CRC should consider the matter of a child’s rights throughout their child and family’s policies, laws, and implementations. The state’s obligations under the CRC, as emphasized by Gilbert [
11], had introduced a new approach on the state’s role in promoting the development of children within the policy orientations attempting to achieve a constructive balance between serving families and protecting children. As stressed by Gilbert, the CRC has prompted the “changing objectives of modern welfare states from social protection against the vagaries of the market economy toward social activation and inclusion, which sought to enable citizens to be productive workers in part by investing in human capital“ [
11] (p. 553).
It should be emphasized that the CRC is primarily laid on human rights and extends Gilbert’s insights. As it was expressed by the CRC Committee, “when a State ratifies the Convention on the Rights of the Child, it takes on obligations under international law to implement it. Implementation is the process whereby [a] State’s parties take action to ensure the realization of all rights in the Convention for all children in their jurisdiction” [
22]. The CRC provides for all human rights such as political, civil, economic, social, and cultural rights for all children. The CRC seeks to promote positive as well as negative rights.
Child protection is a human right and a pillar of the CRC provisions. Child protection is a negative human right. Negative rights cover the child’s right to be free of the state’s intrusions, including rights to freedom of expression (art. 13), to express one’s views in all matters affecting the child and to participate in all decision-making that affect them (art. 12), freedom of thought (art. 14). Article 19 promulgate the state’s obligation to “take all appropriate legislative, administrative, social and educational measures to protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or negligent treatment, maltreatment or exploitation”, including by “the child’s parents, legal guardians or family members” (art. 2.2.).
Child development is the positive human right, which is in conjunction with a family of a child. Positive rights provide for the state‘s obligations to protect and to promote child‘s rights to the development of the child (art. 6), protection and care as is necessary for his or her well-being (art. 3.2.), including rights to education (art. 28), health (art. 24), and many others. Family, as defined in the Preamble of the CRC, is considered as the fundamental group of society and the natural environment for the growth and well-being of all its members and particularly children, and it should be afforded the necessary protection and assistance so that it can fully assume its responsibilities within the community. As a general principle and a main provision, the CRC stipulates that every child should grow up in a family environment, in an atmosphere of happiness, love, and understanding (CRC preamble). For this purpose, the CRC provides for the obligations of the states “to ensure recognition of the principle that both parents have common responsibilities for the upbringing and development of the child … shall render appropriate assistance to parents and legal guardians in the performance of their child-rearing responsibilities and shall ensure the development of institutions, facilities and services for the care of children. (art. 18). Thus, the CRC explicitly provides for the child’s protection against any forms of discrimination and violence, and equally, for the support of parents and family for the full and harmonious development of the child. Herewith, the child’s best interests shall be a primary consideration (art. 3.1., see also General comment No. 14 (2013) by the CRC Committee) [
23]. Numerous studies demonstrate substantial implications that the CRS raises for child and family’s policies, including for social work, in all states’ parties of the CRC. Heimer and Palme [
24] observe the weak imprint of the CRC on Swedish legislation when the lawmaker recognizes parents’ rather than children’s participatory rights. The authors suggest to recognize the children‘s agency through the reconceptualization of child welfare to unlock the stalemate in child policy development in Sweden, as well as to dissolve the tension between children as ‘beings’ and ‘becomings’. James [
25], when analyzing Family Law in England and Wales, identifies that, although the rhetoric of children’s rights is widely accepted, welfare practitioners, the willingness and ability to make these real in the context of family proceedings is, for a variety of reasons, less in evidence. Discourse about parental rights becomes more and more evident in the context of an increasingly influential fathers’ rights lobby. Research on children’s involvement in decision making regarding involuntary child removal by Berricka et al. [
26], using a welfare-state frame in England, Finland, Norway, USA, reveals the wide range in practices, and the wide space for professional discretion in this regard. This research did not identify differences between the family service systems and child protection systems included in this study. McCafferty [
27] argues for a more empowering approach to children’s involvement in social work decision making whilst simultaneously keeping children safe, in relation to the implementation of article 12 of the CRC on the involvement of children in decisions that affect them; the role of the social worker is in representing and reporting the needs, rights, wishes, and views of children for the purpose of representing their “best interests” to the court is highlighted.
Bartholet [
28] discusses about the possible positive impact of the CRC of the United States of America, which is not a CRC State Party, to develop its domestic law in dramatically new directions that would empower children, provide important benefits to them, including health, support, and education, also rights to protection against maltreatment, and rights to nurturing parental care. Scherrer [
29] recommends to the National Association of Social Workers of the US to oversee implementation of the CRC once it is ratified at the US and use the CRC as a basis for all child welfare policy statements.
1.3. Child Welfare and Protection in Lithuania
In Lithuania, the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child was ratified on 3 July 1995. The Law on the Protection of the Rights of the Child of the Republic of Lithuania (No. 60-1501) [
30] states that the protection of the rights of the child in the Republic of Lithuania is guaranteed by the state and its institutions, local government institutions, and public organizations, whose activities relate to the protection of the rights of the child. National legislation puts emphasis on family autonomy and the rights of biological parents. The system is divided into two levels: child protection service (CPS) operates at the state level by employing specialists (mainly those coming from law), and family and child welfare services by employing case managers and family social workers at the municipal level.
In Lithuania, the main actor in the child protection system is the State Child Rights Protection and Adoption Service under the Ministry of Social Security and Labor (hereinafter referred to as the ‘State Protection’) that implements the Children Rights Protection Policy in the territories of the municipalities and participates in the process of the state policy making in the field of Children Rights Protection itself or through its territorial structural divisions (
https://vaikoteises.lt/protection-of-children/the-lithuanian-child-rights-protection-system-/ accesses on 12 March 2021). The State Protection was established in 2000 as the “Adoption service”. From 2005 up to now, the State Protection, in collaboration with other international, state, and municipal institutions, as well as with non-governmental organizations, has implemented national and international measures for the protection of children’s rights. Since 1 July 2018, the State Protection has been reorganized, and several updated and new laws and orders have been settled. Currently, there are 12 Child Rights Protection Divisions of Lithuanian Municipalities (hereinafter referred to as the ‘Divisions’) operating in Lithuania under the governance of the State Protection. The essence of this reorganization was to create a single and coherent system that would facilitate a prompt and professional response to reports of child neglect and violence. The divisions work according to the same standards, unifying values and goals; the same practice of the application of the law is formed; and united, clear, and concrete actions are taken in order to represent and protect the interests of children throughout the country (
https://vaikoteises.lt/apie-tarnyba/ accesses on 10 March 2021). Child protection has become a universal service, not particularly designed for low-income “risk families” as before. Reporting is mandatory for all institutions and other persons who have data on violations of the rights of the child [
30] (Article 35). Since 1 July 2018, the State Protection has responded to reports of violations of the child’s rights, has identified the need for child protection, and has made decisions on the child’s displacement from the family and return to the family. Specialists of CPS in case of possible violation of the rights of the child assesses the situation of the child, initiates the examination of the case, makes decisions regarding individual cases of protection of the rights of the child (Order No. 293 of the Government of the Republic of Lithuania (2005) “On the approval of the regulations of the state service for the protection of the rights of the child and adoption under the Ministry of social security and labor”. (Version 28/03/2018 accesses on 10 March 2021). In a case of child rights violation, CPS refers the case to a case manager working in the family and child welfare services system. According to national legislation, CPS specialists are not considered social workers and are not social services providers.
Public and non-governmental organizations provide social services to a family in the particular territory of the municipality or in a part thereof. Case management of child protection cases is designated to municipal institutions as well to family social workers at the municipal level. Case management was introduced from July 1, 2018. Based on legislation [
31], the aim of case management is to ensure the coordinated provision of social support, education, health care services, community, and legal counselling for families at the municipal level to strengthen the responsibility, abilities, and opportunities of families to solve their issues independently and overcome social exclusion. While in practice, the main responsibilities of case managers include setting up a care plan for families and following up its implementation. Family social workers are the main actors—professionals who support and empower families by establishing a working alliance with them. Comprehensive and preventive services for families and children are provided for by legislation, while in reality, the extreme lack of such services is observed.
Lithuania can be located among the Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries. In the arena of child welfare, these countries, including Lithuania, share similarities, but each of them has its own different cultural, historical, political, social, and economic backgrounds that were strongly influenced by the Soviet ideology. Anghel, Herczog, and Dima [
32] highlight that the CEE countries are culturally very different, but some similarities are identified in child protection legislation and policy implementation. In order to meet the EU policy and in order to be a member of the EU family, the CEE countries have made strong efforts to meet all the requirements provided for by the EU policy legislation. Child welfare protection has been a part of those actions. In all the CEE countries, significant influences have been initiated by the ratification of the UNCRC in the 1990s, which has, according to Melton et al. [
33], universalized demands for democracy and challenged the belief that even the smallest and most vulnerable ones, such as children, could be justifiably denied full recognition as persons entitled to human rights. The UNCRC has been a key document bringing about changes in the CEE countries. Such features as a person-centered approach, child empowerment, alternative services, foster care practice implementation, family participation, and community involvement have become discourses revealed in the documentation and in the rhetoric of the policy makers. Anghel et al. [
32] argue that the gap between policy and practice have become extremely visible, whilst children have become invisible or have been named as a group of “children left behind”. After the Communist regime collapsed, the CEE countries started deinstitutionalization processes. The period from 1989 to 2020 has revealed that each of the CEE countries is at a different stage when comparing the beginnings of the implementation of new practices that take into consideration the child’s best interests, appropriate practices, and attitudes to vulnerability. These are the consequences of the Soviet understanding of child care. The CEE countries have been dealing with problems such as a minimal financial investment into child welfare, a lack of professionalization, and accountability. What is more, child welfare systems have followed the research data at a minimum, and research proposals on this topic tend not to be popular. The practice of child welfare has been built mainly on political documents without the investment into the analysis and evaluation of the services and need [
32].
After the ratification of the CRC, the CEE countries have been involved in new different reform initiatives regarding child welfare. The CRC [
21] states that “the child, for the full and harmonious development of his or her personality, should grow up in a family environment”, which has given the CEE countries an incentive to understand the negative impact of institutional care. As Partskhaladze [
34] highlights, such reform as the deinstitutionalization of residential institutions was started, and later on, two strategic ways such as child care system reform and family strengthening were developed. Family strengthening was started with the focus on preventative social work practice and programs at local and national levels, especially in the medical sector. For example, in some of the CEE countries, in Georgia, early intervention and prevention programs have significantly reduced the relinquishment and abandonment of children. Moreover, the role of the social work profession and the importance of social work practitioners have increased [
34].
4. Discussion
Connolly et al. [
14] noted that the analysis of Gilbert et al. [
2] allows us to understand the expression of the fundamental structures within welfare regimes and has significantly influenced the ways in which professionals understand the complex nature of service systems to support the care and protection of children. The analytical rationale of the child welfare systems developed by Gilbert, Parton, Skivenes, and other scholars [
2] is a powerful conceptual tool for analyzing child welfare systems in different countries. We supposed that the social sustainability approach could inform family and child welfare policy and practice about the human rights perspective, including the Sustainable Development Goals and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UN CRC).
In the research presented in this article, the authors used the approach of Gilbert et al. [
2] to identify the configurations of the child welfare system in Lithuania. Instead of analyzing national statistics, laws, and system characteristics, the present research was based on quantitative empirical data. The observations by child welfare professional actors of their everyday professional practice offered an analytical standpoint for creating an initial broad picture of the child welfare system in Lithuania. The substantial provisions of child rights, such as protection, provision, and participation, have been included, following the proposed framework by Hämäläinen et al. [
8]. Child rights such as the child’s best interests, accessibility to services, the right to be heard, protection against violence, child identity, development assurance, and so forth were included in the data collection instrument.
Regarding the typification of child welfare dimensions, the issue of maltreating parenting was accentuated by the child welfare actors as the prevalent feature of the problem frame in Lithuanian child welfare. The issue of maltreating parents is an attribute of the child protection orientation and, as argued by Gilbert, it is characterized by “deviant behavior and dysfunctional parenting” [
11] (p. 533). Connolly et al. [
14] also related the child protection orientation to neglectful and abusive parental behavior toward their children. In that sense, the problem frame is individualistic and moralistic within the child welfare system, as stressed by Gilbert et al. [
4] (p. 255). The research revealed that when specifying the problem frame, child welfare actors highlighted parental dysfunction rather than child abuse and maltreatment. Thus, it can be assumed that the child is poorly visible in the system. Furthermore, the structural grounds of the problem, such as a lack of accessibility to services, are also not considered enough. The focus of professionals on the dysfunctionality of parents means that the problem of individualization reflects a rather neoliberal-based professional’s attitude to social welfare rather than an attitude based on child rights either in the sense of the UN CRC or in the sense of social sustainability. Additionally, the finding that the lack of accessibility to services was not problematized by professionals also indicates the laissez-faire attitude of professionals due to a deficit of awareness concerning child rights and social sustainability.
The results showed that the parental role was highlighted in the mode of intervention. Empowerment of parents and the assessment of parenting risk and needs were accentuated as the prevalent features of the mode of intervention. From a social sustainability perspective, the empowerment of children is seen as an ambition [
8]. Meanwhile, the empowerment of parents is an attribute of a family services orientation and is characterized by a “therapeutic response to a family’s needs, in which the initial focus involved the assessment of need” [
2] (p. 3). The consideration of the child’s best interests was equally observed by the child welfare actors in their professional practice. Even though the child’s poor visibility may be an issue in the problem frame, it is apparent that the consideration of the child’s opinion was observed in the mode of intervention. Child rights appear as part of the modes of intervention, thus indicating that social sustainability intrinsically lies within the professional role and mission. The fact that the provision of preventive services was much less observed by the child welfare professional actors confirms the above-mentioned observation about the lack of accessibility to services and indicates the residual laissez-faire nature of child welfare services in Lithuania. Ignoring the problem of provision on a societal level casts doubt on the system’s capabilities to support families and children and resounds with “the principle of protection …that is implemented in a minimal way” [
8] (p. 4).
Regarding the aim of intervention, an advanced finding of child welfare in Lithuania was observed. The balance between focusing on the assurance of the child’s development and identity, support of parenting, and child protection from abuse and maltreatment was observed by child welfare professionals in Lithuania. This finding explicitly echoes the insights of Gilbert et al. [
4] about the mix of the three orientations of child welfare, that is, child protection, family services, and a child-focused orientation, and “rather than trying to place countries somewhere on the line of a continuum from child focus to family service to child protection, we might think of where they might fall within a three-dimensional framework—closer to some planes than others” [
4] (pp. 255–256). The aims of intervention align well with the sustainability concept, as “from the perspective of sustainability, the questions are how to support families with children, make such investments in child and family policy so that families feel secure, and ensure children’s resources for the future” [
8] (p. 1).
The fourth child welfare dimension, namely, the state–parent relationship, as observed by the child welfare actors, revealed tensions between the state and parents. The prevalent partnership observed between the state and parents assumed that the state had an obligation to support parents in ensuring favorable conditions for the child’s development. However, family resistance to the state’s interference was also observed as the prevalent factor. This suggests the tension between the child protection system and the “normative context“ [
35]. As Wulzcyn et al. noted, ‘‘Child protection systems work best when symmetry exists between the system’s goals, its structures, functions, and capacities and the normative context in which it operates“ [
35] (p. 3) for enhancing the social sustainability within the child and family welfare system. Family members are anxious about the state’s interference in relation to child protection, although the immediate relationship between the state and the child was rarely observed by child welfare professionals. This tension arises from the issues stressed by Friis [
12], who argued that mediation between legal and social norms is possible only from a service-oriented position through the state’s collaboration with the family, while from a child protection-oriented position, collaboration is problematic. Legal norms alone cannot forcibly keep children and parents together or change the nature of their damaged relations, while, as noted by Friis [
12], a collaboration between the state and parents makes mediation between social and legal norms possible. The concept of social sustainability would be particularly relevant to enforcing the need for state and family collaboration through providing a systematic and holistic approach to family and child welfare. The participation of a child through the implementation of the right to be heard as one of the main child rights provisions would be particularly constructive for developing state and family collaboration within a social sustainability perspective.
Wulczyn et al. noted that “children are effectively protected by such systems when both the system and the normative context in which it is embedded places the highest priority on assuring children are free from violence, abuse, exploitation, and other forms of maltreatment” [
35] (p. 18). Emphasizing parental dysfunction, orientation to meeting needs of parents in intervention mode, not observing the problem of lack of services, including preventive services, resounds with an unsustainable child protection system in Lithuania. With reference to intervention aims, integrating focus on the assurance of the child’ development and identity, support of parenting, and child protection from abuse and maltreatment suggests future investments for the sustainable development of child protection system.
The configuration of the child welfare system in Lithuania as well as four prominent orientations were identified, as observed by the child welfare actors. A parent-focused orientation could be characterized as a mixture of a child protection and family services orientation to child welfare. A child rights orientation could be characterized as a mixture of a family services orientation and a child-focused orientation. As observed by the social welfare actors in their everyday professional practice, the child welfare system in Lithuania functions according to two main orientations: a parent-focused orientation and a child rights orientation. The mixture of these two is at the core of the child welfare system and resounds with the concept of social sustainability.
A laissez-faire child welfare orientation, similar to a child-focused orientation, is a far distance from child rights and parent-focused orientations and from each other as well. A laissez-faire child welfare orientation reflects the problem of a lack of accessibility to services. A child-focused orientation reflects the immediate relationship between the state and the child. A laissez-faire orientation represents an undesirable relict in the residual child welfare system, whereas a child-focused orientation reflects professionals’ concern about the consequences of the intervention that arise from the lack of accessibility to services, including their quality and variety. If the proximity between child rights and parent-focused orientations is a sign of a well-balanced standard of the system, the laissez-faire and child-focused orientations demonstrate divergent elements of the child welfare system, which, if not addressed, can jeopardize the child welfare system in the sense of social sustainability.
The issue of different professional groups has been touched upon in the research. Two professional groups may be viewed as the main actors in the child welfare system in Lithuania: professional social workers and child rights professionals. Both of them function under different jurisdictions, have different professional educational backgrounds, social work in case of social service providers and family social workers, and law in case of child rights professionals. Further studies are needed to analyze the relation between two different groups in the system for a sustainable child and welfare system.
The research strongly indicates the need for awareness raising, including education and training for social workers and other professional actors regarding child and family welfare, as an integral part of the concept of social sustainability. Further studies are needed to explore the links between family and child welfare and social sustainability. Relying on the findings of our research, we also assume that the child welfare concept is to be reconsidered and explicitly reframed in terms of human rights and social sustainability in order to respond to the challenges emerging in children’s and families lives.