Definition
Statens Barnehus is a coordinated service designed to reduce the burden on children and particularly vulnerable persons during criminal investigations involving suspected violence or sexual abuse. It provides a safe setting for tilrettelagte avhør (facilitated interviews) and coordinated follow-up with relevant services.
Do Better Norge is an advocacy and knowledge-base project focused on children’s rights, due process, and family life protections in Norway. This entry is written in that spirit: practical, evidence-based, and anchored to primary sources.
What happens at a Barnehus
- Facilitated interviews led by police investigators trained for child/vulnerable witnesses.
- Coordination between police, child welfare, health services, and other relevant actors.
- Practical support for the child and caregivers before and after interviews.
Why families should understand the process
- Statements and observations can influence both criminal and child welfare pathways.
- Communication and interpretation issues can create misunderstandings that later harden into “facts.”
- Children may experience stress — the system aims to reduce harm, but outcomes depend on quality and safeguards.
Do Better Norge perspective: safeguards you should insist on
- Language access: request professional interpretation if needed — avoid relying on informal translation.
- Documentation: ask what will be written, where it will be stored, and who receives it.
- Boundaries: clarify the role of each agency (police vs. child welfare vs. health).
- Legal advice: if you are involved in a parallel conflict, seek counsel early to avoid procedural traps.
What you can do (practical checklist)
- Write down dates, contacts, and what you were told. Keep emails/SMS.
- Ask for confirmations in writing where possible (appointments, roles, next steps).
- Be calm and factual; avoid speculation. Focus on verifiable information.
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