In Norway's child welfare system (barnevernet), parents and families frequently report feeling shut out of processes that have profound consequences for their lives. Decisions are made, reports are written, meetings are held — and yet parents are often given only partial, delayed, or heavily redacted access to the information that drives those decisions. The Lov om rett til innsyn i dokument i offentleg verksemd — commonly known as Offentleglova — is the primary legal instrument designed to correct this imbalance.[1]
Enacted in its current form in 2006 and in force since 2009, Offentleglova replaced the older 1970 Public Administration Act provisions on access and established a more robust, rights-based framework.[2] Understanding and using this law effectively can help parents build a clearer picture of what has been communicated about their case, identify procedural irregularities, and gather evidence that may support appeals or complaints to supervisory bodies — including the County Social Welfare Board (Fylkesnemnda), the County Governor (Statsforvalteren), and ultimately the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR).[3]
Offentleglova applies broadly across Norway's public sector. Under Section 2 of the Act, it covers all state organs, all county and municipal authorities, and publicly owned companies and foundations where the government holds a majority interest.[4] Crucially, it also extends to certain private entities that carry out tasks on behalf of the public authorities — meaning that a private placement home or care provider contracted by Barnevernet may, in some circumstances, fall within scope.[5]
For parents engaged with child welfare proceedings, the most relevant organs include: municipal child welfare services (barneverntjenesten), the County Governor's offices, the Ministry of Children and Families (Barne- og familiedepartementet), and the Directorate for Children, Youth and Family Affairs (Bufdir).
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