Definition
\nMinste inngreps prinsipp (the principle of the least intrusive intervention) is a foundational rule in Norwegian child welfare: the state must choose the mildest effective measure and may not impose a more intrusive intervention than necessary to protect the child.
\n\nWhy it is so important
\nThe principle is the legal “brake pedal” that is supposed to prevent the system from escalating too quickly — from concerns, to investigations, to coercive measures, to long-term separation. It also mirrors the proportionality and necessity requirements under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights when the state interferes with family life.
\n\nWhere the principle applies
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- Investigations (undersøkelse): Information gathering should be as limited as possible and not broader than the purpose requires. \n
- Support measures (hjelpetiltak): Voluntary and in-home measures should be seriously assessed before out-of-home placement. \n
- Emergency work (akuttarbeid): Even under time pressure, authorities must document why less intrusive options are insufficient. \n
- Contact restrictions (samvær): Restrictions must be evidence-based, time-limited, and justified against the goal of maintaining family ties. \n
What “least intrusive” means in practice
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- Alternatives test: What less intrusive measures were considered? Why were they rejected? \n
- Effectiveness test: Is the chosen measure likely to achieve the child-safety goal? \n
- Time-limit and review: If intrusive measures are used, what is the review date and the exit plan? \n
- Written proportionality reasoning: The decision must show a real weighing of child protection vs. family life — not slogans. \n
Do Better Norge perspective: how the principle gets violated
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- “Auto-escalation” where the system jumps from vague concerns to drastic measures without trialing supports. \n
- Over-collection of information (broad mapping, repeated observations, extensive third-party collection) that goes beyond the stated purpose. \n
- Contact as control where restrictions are treated as routine management rather than an exceptional, justified interference. \n
- Paper compliance where “considered alternatives” appears in text, but no real alternatives are documented. \n
Parent-facing checklist (use in writing)
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- List at least 3 realistic, less intrusive alternatives (family network support, parenting guidance, practical help, safety plan). \n
- Ask the authority to respond to each alternative and explain why it is insufficient. \n
- Demand a review date and measurable criteria for reduction/termination of intrusive measures. \n
- Ask explicitly how the authority has weighed family life and reunification. \n
Official references
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- Regjeringen: Prop. 133 L on the principle and proportionality \n
- NOU 2016:16: Regulation of fundamental rights and principles \n
- NOU 2023:7: Legal safeguards for children and parents \n
- Bufdir: Evidence-based guideline for acute work (mentions “stopp- og sjekkpunkter”) \n
- Bufdir: Example description of the least intrusive principle \n
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