Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with Professionals

This article explores trust in children’s relationships with professionals in the context of safeguarding concerns. With exception, existing research with children about trust in professionals often fails to unpick trust. Using sociological conceptualisations of trust, most often considere...

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Main Author: Hayley Davies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/8/9/251
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spelling doaj-cd3fb3dc11814fa2a9d1d2c06e938dd32020-11-25T01:48:51ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602019-09-018925110.3390/socsci8090251socsci8090251Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with ProfessionalsHayley Davies0School of Education, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UKThis article explores trust in children’s relationships with professionals in the context of safeguarding concerns. With exception, existing research with children about trust in professionals often fails to unpick trust. Using sociological conceptualisations of trust, most often considered in relation to adults, this article unravels this complex concept. It arrives at a conception of trust as socially situated, an attribute of relationships, and a combination of interpretation (knowledge and experience) and faith. This conceptualization of trust is examined in the context of interview accounts from children that were aged 8−10 in an English primary school. Interviews invited their perspectives on three fictional vignettes about peer conflict, domestic abuse, and child sexual abuse. My analysis, although small-scale, argues that focusing on the process of trust in children’s professional relationships and the social, cultural, political, and relational contexts that shape this process, is a lucrative way to gain enhanced understandings of how trust is generated and what facilitates and undermines trust. It sheds light on children’s interpretations of existing relationships and imagined interactions with professionals, revealing the knowledge that they hold and what they do not yet, or cannot know, and how this knowledge (or lack of) influences their trust. This analysis is socially situated attending to children’s biographies, which offers insights that provide good grounds for improving children’s relationships with professionals.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/8/9/251childrentrustdistrustprofessional relationshipssafeguardingbiographies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hayley Davies
spellingShingle Hayley Davies
Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with Professionals
Social Sciences
children
trust
distrust
professional relationships
safeguarding
biographies
author_facet Hayley Davies
author_sort Hayley Davies
title Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with Professionals
title_short Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with Professionals
title_full Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with Professionals
title_fullStr Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with Professionals
title_full_unstemmed Trust and Distrust: Listening to Children about Their Relationships with Professionals
title_sort trust and distrust: listening to children about their relationships with professionals
publisher MDPI AG
series Social Sciences
issn 2076-0760
publishDate 2019-09-01
description This article explores trust in children’s relationships with professionals in the context of safeguarding concerns. With exception, existing research with children about trust in professionals often fails to unpick trust. Using sociological conceptualisations of trust, most often considered in relation to adults, this article unravels this complex concept. It arrives at a conception of trust as socially situated, an attribute of relationships, and a combination of interpretation (knowledge and experience) and faith. This conceptualization of trust is examined in the context of interview accounts from children that were aged 8−10 in an English primary school. Interviews invited their perspectives on three fictional vignettes about peer conflict, domestic abuse, and child sexual abuse. My analysis, although small-scale, argues that focusing on the process of trust in children’s professional relationships and the social, cultural, political, and relational contexts that shape this process, is a lucrative way to gain enhanced understandings of how trust is generated and what facilitates and undermines trust. It sheds light on children’s interpretations of existing relationships and imagined interactions with professionals, revealing the knowledge that they hold and what they do not yet, or cannot know, and how this knowledge (or lack of) influences their trust. This analysis is socially situated attending to children’s biographies, which offers insights that provide good grounds for improving children’s relationships with professionals.
topic children
trust
distrust
professional relationships
safeguarding
biographies
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/8/9/251
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