Abstract
Australia’s 2017 Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse recommended to organizations that children should participate in decisions affecting their lives as a safety standard. While a substantial body of research about children’s voices in statutory or out‐of‐home care now exists, there remains a paucity of research into children’s voices in family support services delivered by nongovernment organizations. This is despite the primary service purpose being to benefit children. This lack of focus in family support was identified as a research priority by a nongovernment organization in Queensland, Australia, which lead to a collaborative research programme. This article reports on initial research from a survey study to describe the current state of play from practitioners into their perceptions and practices of children’s participation in family support contexts. A voluntary and anonymous online, qualitative‐predominate survey was opened to 110 practitioners in family support services, of which 50% responded. The findings identified that children’s voices were compromised by perceptions of children’s capacity relating to age and vulnerability, the parental focus of the service coupled with perceptions of parent’s needs and gatekeeping behaviours and service pressures that work against the conditions required for children’s rights to voice.