Introduction
The Panel currently consists of a Chair and eight other members from across those professions involved in child safeguarding, including the Chief Social Worker for Children and Families.
This recruitment exercise seeks to appoint four Panel members with backgrounds in Social Care, Education, Criminal Justice and Mental Health from November 2025. However, the Panel members will be appointed to fill the roles as an individual acting in the public interest and not as a representative of their particular profession, employer or interest group.
The Panel understands the value of having representation from Criminal Justice to help it bring a multi-agency perspective to its work. The Panel seeks to appoint a candidate with a background in Criminal Justice.
The people recruited will need to understand the importance of listening to the voice and experience of the child in serious child safeguarding cases.
The new Panel members will be supported during their initial period with the Panel by both the Chair and Panel Secretariat. This includes introductory conversations with the Chair and support from the Secretariat to understand Panel processes and procedures.
Introduction from the Minister
Dear Candidate,
Thank you for your interest in becoming a member of the independent Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel.
No child should ever suffer harm, abuse, or neglect, and reducing this is the Panel’s primary focus. If tragedy does strike and a child dies, or is seriously harmed, then there is no role more important than one which can review the practice of all agencies involved in the life of the child and their family to identify learning and areas of improvement.
The Panel has been operational since June 2018 and since then has become well regarded by safeguarding partnerships and the child protection sector. The Panel have the power to commission national reviews of serious child safeguarding cases which they believe are particularly complex or have issues of national importance. These national reviews help to identify improvements needed to assist safeguarding partnerships and child protection agencies to better safeguard and promote the welfare of children. More details on the Panel’s ongoing and published reviews can be found
here.
The Panel is responsible for supervising reviews they commission, ensuring they are of a satisfactory quality, that timely progress is made, and that improvements that safeguarding partners or others should make can be easily identified. To do this, the Panel has its own statutory powers, independent of Government and makes its own decisions.
Further information on the Panel can be found on the
Child-safeguarding-practice-review-panel webpage.My department is focused on equality of opportunity, and I particularly welcome applications from women, people with disabilities, LGBT candidates, and those from Black, Asian and minority ethnic backgrounds.
If you share my conviction and have the skills and experience to make sound judgements on complex situations affecting the lives of children, I urge you to apply for this role.
RT HON BRIDGET PHILLIPSON - SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EDUCATION
Appointment description
Under the leadership of a Chair, Panel members are responsible for looking at serious child safeguarding cases notified to the Panel to determine whether learning could be identified through further analysis or a national review. Responsibilities include leading reviews, supervising fieldwork, undertaking analysis and other activity supporting the Panel’s remit. Members are also responsible for supporting the dissemination of learning identified by the Panel to those involved in child safeguarding.
Key responsibilities
- Drawing on your professional expertise and experience, to contribute to Panel decisions and analysis of cases at fortnightly Panel meetings.
- Ensuring the Panel’s reviews identify any improvements that should be made by safeguarding partners or others to safeguard and promote the welfare of children.
- Leading Panel national reviews and other analytical activity supporting the Panel’s role and remit.
- Supporting the dissemination of learning identified by the Panel.
- Building and maintaining positive relationships with multi-agency safeguarding partners and practitioners so that up-to-date understanding of child safeguarding, and practice challenges informs your contribution to Panel debate and decisions.
- Providing a regional lead for safeguarding partners in an allocated region. This includes strategic engagement with safeguarding partners in the region, conversations about general or specific issues relating to the Panel’s work and, where appropriate, speaking at regional events.