What Does It Take to Ensure Children’s Cultural Care? Examining Organisational Drivers Across Five National Contexts
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Methodology
Ethical Approval
- A United States industry–research partner, leading a five-year, positively evaluated kinship and foster care training program incorporating culturally specific curriculum and adoption pathways.
- An England-based coordinating agency representative, with responsibility for out-of-home care service delivery, training, advocacy, and sector oversight.
- A Norwegian research leader, partnering with out-of-home care services to strengthen evidence-informed practice for children from migrant and refugee backgrounds.
3. Findings
3.1. Theme 1: Leadership as the Architect of Cultural Care
3.1.1. Leadership in Embedding and Sustaining Cultural Care
3.1.2. Navigating Political, Social and Budgetary Tensions
3.1.3. Stewarding Collective Organisational Responsibility
3.2. Theme 2: Safeguarding Architects—Embedding Culture in Organisational Practice
3.2.1. Data as a Safeguard: Capturing Children’s Cultural Identities
3.2.2. Governance and Oversight: Ensuring Cultural Care Is Practised
3.2.3. Championing Cultural Care Through Interagency Partnerships
3.3. Theme 3: Advancing Practice Through Reflexive Dialogue and Cultural Partnerships
3.3.1. Engaging in Reflexive Dialogue
3.3.2. Practising Cultural Humility in Leadership
3.3.3. Co-Producing with Cultural Knowledge Holders
4. Discussion
4.1. Leadership as a Driver of Cultural Care
4.2. Structural Embedding and Operationalisation
4.3. Organisational Learning as a Sustaining Mechanism
4.4. Integrating Rights and Governance
5. Implications for Policy and Practice
- Structural Embedding: Cultural care should be formalised within performance indicators, documentation standards, and quality assurance frameworks to ensure sustainability.
- Leadership Advocacy: Sustained attention to cultural priorities during periods of instability demonstrates authentic organisational commitment.
- Organisational Learning: Reflexive systems and authentic partnerships with cultural knowledge holders are essential for maintaining culturally responsive practice over time.
- Relational Data Practices: Data systems should move beyond demographic categorisation to capture children’s lived experiences and cultural identities, enhancing visibility and accountability.
- Cultural Care as Governance Barometer: Alignment between policy, practice, and organisational oversight reflects the integrity of rights-based commitments.
6. Limitations
Practice Resource: A–Z Reflective Prompts for Culturally Responsive Care
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Letter | Reflective Prompt | Theme | |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Advocacy | How do I actively champion children’s cultural identities and connections in policy, practice, and resource decisions, particularly during periods of pressure or reform? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
| B | Bias Awareness | What unconscious biases may influence my judgments, risk assessments, or decisions regarding children’s cultural identities, heritage, or community connections? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| C | Continuity of relationships | How am I protecting the “golden threads” of relational and cultural connection across placements, transitions, and time? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| D | Documentation and Data | Do our documentation and data systems capture children’s cultural identities, lived experiences, and relational context, or merely satisfy compliance requirements? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| E | Ethical Attentiveness | How do I weigh the ethical implications of decisions that may strengthen or disrupt a child’s cultural identity, belonging, and connection to their community? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
| F | Feedback Loops | How are children’s and families’ voices, including their cultural perspectives and experiences, systematically informing supervision, service design, and organisational learning? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| G | Governance and Indicators | Do our governance structures, audits, and performance indicators make cultural care visible, measurable, and accountable? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| H | Humility | How willing am I to acknowledge gaps in knowledge about different cultures and model curiosity when engaging with diverse children, families, and communities? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| I | Implementation Integrity | Are we translating cultural commitments into sustainable practice systems, or relying on individual goodwill? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| J | Justice | Do our decisions actively prevent cultural marginalisation and promote equitable access to identity, continuity, and community connection? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
| K | Knowledge Mobilisation | How do we convert insights from children, families, and cultural knowledge holders into everyday culturally responsive practice? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| L | Leadership Modelling | How do leaders visibly model cultural humility, courage, and accountability in strategy, supervision, and workforce development? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
| M | Monitoring | What mechanisms track, review, and respond to children’s cultural identities, connections, and wellbeing over time, and how do we act on what we find? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| N | Navigating Uncertainty | How do we manage fear of “getting it wrong” without retreating from critical conversations about culture, identity, and belonging? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| O | Organisational Narrative | Does our organisational story position cultural care as foundational to safeguarding, or as discretionary? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
| P | Practitioner Support | Are reflective supervision, training, and psychologically safe dialogue actively protected to support culturally responsive practice, particularly during crisis? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| Q | Quality Assurance | How do we test whether cultural care is relational, protective, and culturally informed rather than procedural or symbolic? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| R | Resource Allocation | Are resources intentionally directed toward sustaining children’s cultural continuity, community connection, and identity, even when fiscal pressures intensify? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
| S | Systems Alignment | Do leadership messaging, data systems, and accountability processes consistently reinforce cultural priorities across the organisation | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| T | Training and Development | Is cultural learning ongoing, reflexive, and embedded within supervision and performance review, rather than episodic? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| U | Understanding Children’s Perspective | How are children’s voices, particularly about their cultural identity and connections, meaningfully integrated into their care planning and organisational decision-making? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| V | Visibility | Are children’s cultural identities and community connections visible in data systems, case plans, and strategic reporting? | Theme 2—Governance & Structural Embedding |
| W | Workforce Capability | How do staff diversity, cultural competence, and stability influence the depth and consistency of culturally responsive practice? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
| X | eXamination of Practice | What evidence demonstrates that we critically review cultural practice consistency and responsiveness across teams and cases? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| Y | Yielding to Lived Experience | How do we share power with cultural knowledge holders and respond to lived cultural experiences in shaping practice? | Theme 3—Organisational Learning |
| Z | Zero Tolerance for Cultural Disconnection | How do we demonstrate that protecting children’s cultural identity, continuity, and belonging is a non-negotiable safeguarding responsibility? | Theme 1—Leadership Framing |
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Karatasas, K.; Grace, R.; Higgins, D.J. What Does It Take to Ensure Children’s Cultural Care? Examining Organisational Drivers Across Five National Contexts. Soc. Sci. 2026, 15, 351. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15060351
Karatasas K, Grace R, Higgins DJ. What Does It Take to Ensure Children’s Cultural Care? Examining Organisational Drivers Across Five National Contexts. Social Sciences. 2026; 15(6):351. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15060351
Chicago/Turabian StyleKaratasas, Kathy, Rebekah Grace, and Daryl J. Higgins. 2026. "What Does It Take to Ensure Children’s Cultural Care? Examining Organisational Drivers Across Five National Contexts" Social Sciences 15, no. 6: 351. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15060351
APA StyleKaratasas, K., Grace, R., & Higgins, D. J. (2026). What Does It Take to Ensure Children’s Cultural Care? Examining Organisational Drivers Across Five National Contexts. Social Sciences, 15(6), 351. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15060351

