Innovation in children’s social care: Contextual Safeguarding, Trauma-informed Practice and Transitional Safeguarding

Published: 19/04/2023

Author: Michelle Lefevre

The Innovate Project is a four year study exploring how social care and other safeguarding agencies are innovating to address the extra-familial risks and/or harms that young people may encounter and experience beyond the family home.

The project has been funded by the Economic and Social Research Council between 2019 and 2023. Our view was that understanding more about what happens during innovation, when, how and why is best done in context, so we have studied situated innovation over time as it happened in six local authorities, inter-agency safeguarding networks and voluntary and community sector organisations.

How can innovation be effectively facilitated in children’s social care and tailored to local contexts?

An upcoming series of open access webinars will explore learning from the Innovate Project, exploring how to effectively support innovation and tailor new approaches to your local context.

Learning more about the processes of innovation in social care has been the focus of the Innovate Project. The project has studied the introduction of new professional responses to extra-familial risks and harms that young people experience and encounter beyond the family home in six different pilot sites, focusing on:

  • Contextual Safeguarding
  • Trauma-informed practice
  • Transitional Safeguarding.

By following the ups and downs of innovation journeys, we were able to understand how decisions were made and their effects; the important role played by interactive dynamics of risk, power and relationships; and what system capabilities were needed to enable innovation to flourish and sustain. We have also learned more about what other organisations might need to take into account when seeking to implement one of these three approaches.

Sharing learning from the Innovate Project

Our forthcoming series of open access webinars in association with Research in Practice marks an important moment when we can share our key findings with those commissioning and leading innovation and respond to the questions that are raised about what is important to consider when tailoring these new practice and system approaches to a local context.

You can attend all the webinars in the series or just one of them.

This open access webinar on 14 June will focus on facilitators, barriers and the system capabilities that support innovation in the children’s social care sector.

Find out more.

This open access webinar on 28 June will present challenges, system conditions, and practice and culture change experienced by organisations embarking on trauma-informed journeys.

Find out more.

This open access webinar on 19 July will explore the flexible and creative use of Contextual Safeguarding principles and practices in local innovation.

Find out more.

This open access webinar on 20 September will focus on the value of reflective spaces in supporting innovation planning, implementation and learning.

Find out more.

Open access resources from the Innovate Project

The Innovate Project has freely available resources for organisations to use when developing innovate practice. These include:

To receive regular updates and early notification of new events, email info@theinnovateproject.co.uk. More books and papers are being written and, in the autumn, we will be holding an in-person conference which drills further down into issues of implementation during workshops. Over this summer, we’ll be holding webinars with practice and academic colleagues in other countries to learn more about the relevance of our findings for other geographic, cultural and legal contexts.

By sharing key learning from the project, we hope to increase understanding about the processes of innovation in social care, including the barriers and levers, and what system capabilities are needed to allow innovation to flourish and sustain over time.

Michelle Lefevre

Michelle Lefevre is Professor of Social Work at the University of Sussex and Director of CIRCY – the Centre for Innovation and Research in Childhood and Youth. Her research primarily focuses on professional practice with children, young people and families where there are issues of risk and harm, and it is rooted in her background as a child protection social worker and arts psychotherapist.