After a care order, the Child Welfare Service must follow up parents with a written plan and reunification-oriented support where appropriate.
Definition
OppfΓΈlging av foreldre (βfollow-up of parentsβ) refers to the Child Welfare Serviceβs ongoing duty to follow up parents after a child has been taken into care. This is not optional βnice to haveβ supportβit is a core safeguard intended to protect the childβs right to family life and to keep reunification as a real possibility where appropriate.
What the law requires (in plain language)
Norwayβs Child Welfare Act includes explicit duties after a care order, including:
- Follow-up of the child (monitor development and whether the child receives proper care).
- Follow-up of the parents, including support that can contribute to parents being able to regain care when appropriate.
- A written plan for the childβs care situation and the follow-up of the child and parents, prepared as soon as possible after the care order and updated when needed.
Why this is a major problem area
Multiple reviews and reports have pointed out that follow-up of parents can be inadequate or unsystematic. When follow-up is weak, reunification becomes a βpaper possibilityβ rather than a real pathwayβespecially if contact (samvΓ¦r) is also limited.
Do Better Norge perspective
From a rights-based lens, poor follow-up creates a self-reinforcing loop:
- Parents receive minimal support and limited contact.
- The relationship weakens due to system design, not parental intent.
- The state then cites the weakened bond as a reason to maintain separation.
This is where Article 8 principles become concrete: authorities must demonstrate individual assessment, proportionality, and genuine work toward reunification when it is in the childβs best interests.
What parents should do (practical)
- Demand the written follow-up plan and ask what specific steps are aimed at reunification (if reunification is a stated goal).
- Request clear objectives: what must change, how it will be measured, and when it will be reviewed.
- Document every interaction (meetings, phone calls, emails, visit notes).
- Challenge βno planβ situations through formal complaint channels and oversight bodies.
References and official resources
Do Better Norge note: βFollow-up of parentsβ is one of the most important accountability checkpoints in Norwegian child welfare. If it is missing, document it early.
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