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Child Welfare

Nemnda (The Child Welfare and Health Tribunal)

Updated 18 Feb 2026 3 min read 👁 8 views ✎ dbnadmin
Nemnda (The Child Welfare and Health Tribunal)
Child welfare decisions in Norway must be guided by the best interests of the child.
A rights-focused guide to Nemnda (the Child Welfare Tribunal): what it decides, how hearings work, key safeguards, and how court review fits into due process.

Definition

Nemnda (Barneverns- og helsenemnda; previously Fylkesnemnda) is an independent decision-making body that handles coercive measures in child welfare and certain health cases. Although it is an administrative body, it performs judicial-type functions: it hears evidence, applies legal thresholds, and issues binding decisions.

What Nemnda decides

The tribunal decides cases concerning coercive measures pursuant to the Child Welfare Act (and, in some situations, related health legislation). The official tribunal site describes it as an independent and impartial decision-making body (BVHN: The Child Welfare Tribunal (official site)). It also states that case processing should be fair, sound, swift, efficient and confidence-inspiring (BVHN: purpose and authority).

How a case typically starts

Tribunal cases most often begin when the municipal child welfare service submits an application/claim for measures. The tribunal then organises hearings and the collection of evidence. The tribunal’s own guidance explains this starting point and describes common claim types (BVHN: tribunal hearings).

Procedural safeguards that matter

  • Right to be heard: parties must have a real opportunity to comment on evidence and proposals.
  • Equality of arms: the municipality is a repeat player; parents are often notβ€”so documentation and legal support matter.
  • Legal assistance: the tribunal notes that parties have the right to legal assistance if they wish (BVHN: legal assistance and guidance).
  • Reasoned decisions: decisions should show which facts were accepted and how the legal conditions were met.

Composition

Panels typically include a legal chair (jurist) and additional members (often including an expert and ordinary member). In practice, expert evidence can carry large weightβ€”making transparency around mandates, methods, and contradiction essential.

Appeal and judicial review

The Government’s information page explains that the tribunal is a state body with an independent professional position, and that its decisions may be reviewed by the courts (Regjeringen: tribunal independence and court review). This court review is the core safeguard against wrongful coercive measuresβ€”if families can realistically access it in time and with adequate legal support.

Do Better Norge perspective

Nemnda is where a family’s future can be shaped in a matter of days. When contact is restricted and reunification is treated as optional, the system can drift toward permanent separation. DBN’s position is simple: coercive measures must be temporary, proportionate, and relentlessly reunification-oriented, and the process must allow genuine contradiction of the municipality’s narrative.

Official resources

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