Just Call Me Dad: Health and Social Benefits to Fathers and their Children
Description
In the past 20 years, social change and expectations for both maternal and paternal responsibilities have
highlighted the need for services for families to better understand the role of a father in family relationships.
In Australia, as well as internationally, there have been many contested understandings about what constitutes
‘good fathering’ in research, social media and in the political sphere. More specifically, there has also
been an emerging trend to understand the challenging task of recruiting and maintaining men’s involvement
in child and family services programmes, particularly those fathers who are deemed a risk to children
and mothers, violent or have been separated from their children. That many child and family/welfare services
have exercised dedicated effort to work with fathers is still a relatively recent phenomenon, and has
only emerged following criticism that services have been too geared towards working only with mothers.
Despite this increasing interest, there is still ongoing need for more research to be undertaken in Australia.
An important area of focus is the views of professionals about their perception and engagement of fathers,
particularly the views of fathers who are described as being absent from family-based services. The purpose
of this article is to report briefly on a study undertaken to examine how child and family welfare workers
engage fathers in their work. First, this paper will describe some of the social and health benefits to fathers
and their children, focusing on the key role of attachment through play. Research into effective service
delivery involving fathers will then be presented, concluding with key practice factors necessary for fathers
to be involved in family life.
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