Exploring

Why men go unseen

Understanding why men go unseen is essential to improving safeguarding practice. When men are not identified, engaged, or fully understood, both risk and protective factors can be missed.

Learning from case reviews shows that men are often present in children’s lives but not fully considered in assessments, conversations, or planning.

Going Unseen

What It Means in Practice

Men going unseen does not always mean they are physically absent. In many cases, they are known but not explored in depth, or their role is not fully considered.

This can result in an incomplete picture of the child’s world, where key relationships, risks, and strengths are not clearly understood.

In practice, this can look like:

  • Limited information recorded about fathers or male carers
  • Men not being routinely invited to meetings or assessments
  • Reliance on second-hand information
  • Minimal curiosity about their role in the child’s life
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Learning from Reviews

National and local learning highlights a consistent theme: when men are not fully considered, safeguarding practice is weakened.

This includes situations where men who posed significant risk were not assessed, as well as cases where men who could have offered support were overlooked.

Key learning includes:

  • Important men were not identified early
  • Information about men was not shared across agencies
  • Risk was not fully assessed or understood
  • Protective relationships were missed
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Why This Happens
  • Text link image Common Factors
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    Men going unseen is rarely down to one factor. It is usually the result of patterns in practice, systems, and assumptions.
    Sometimes there is an over-focus on the parent most visible to services. In other cases, practitioners may feel unsure about how to engage men or may rely on existing information rather than exploring further.

    Common contributing factors include:
    Services designed primarily around mothers
    Over-reliance on one parent’s account
    Lack of professional curiosity
    Uncertainty about roles and responsibilities
    Challenges in sharing information across agencies

  • Text link image Pathways to men going unseen
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    Men may go unseen when:

    They are not identified early
    They are known but not engaged
    Their role is not explored or revisited
    Information is not shared or connected

    Each stage increases the risk of gaps in understanding.

  • Text link image Risk and Missed Opportunity
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    When men are unseen, safeguarding practice is affected in two key ways.

    Firstly, risks may not be identified or fully understood. This includes situations where men pose harm but are not assessed or included in decision-making.
    Secondly, opportunities are missed. Men can play a positive and protective role in children’s lives, but this can only happen when they are recognised and included.