The Meaning Of The Child Interview – So What? Towards a Systemic and Ecological Assessment of Caregiving.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Abstract

The aim of this book has been to show how the Meaning of the Child Interview (MotC) assesses parent-child discourse and utilises it to understand relationships and plan intervention. This chapter focusses on the ‘why?’ – what is it that the MotC is doing differently and what is it offering the world of child and family welfare? The chapter briefly summarises research conducted on and with the MotC, as a springboard to outline three principles the MotC weaves together in a unique way. These are:
1. understanding parental caregiving in terms of the compromises parents make to manage an often-hostile environment,
2. a shift from information processing to meaning-making, and
3. a move to seeing attachment and caregiving security/sensitivity as located in a web of systemic relationships rather than as situated in parent-child dyads or individuals.
None of these principles are new in themselves, and the MotC leans heavily on the work of others. The MotC however, operationalises them practically in a path for practitioners to use and follow. If put into practice, this perspective profoundly challenges how professional systems and institutions operate, and how attachment theory is commonly applied in work with children and families.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Meaning of the Child: Making Sense of Parent-Child Relationships
EditorsBen Grey
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Chapter17
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 28 Feb 2025

Publication series

NamePalgrave Texts in Counselling and Psychotherapy

Keywords

  • meaning of the child interview, attachment theory, attachment, caregiving, parenting, child welfare, child protection, child mental health, parent-child relationships, family systems, social systems

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