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Home / Crime and Justice / Greenlandic Families Fight Danish Child Seizures

Greenlandic Families Fight Danish Child Seizures

24 Nov, 2025

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Summary

  • Danish parenting tests used on Greenlandic families are criticized for cultural bias.
  • Greenlandic parents are 5.6 times more likely to have children taken into care.
  • Denmark banned the tests but is slow to review past cases of child removal.
Greenlandic Families Fight Danish Child Seizures

Danish social services have been accused of unfairly removing children from Greenlandic families living in Denmark. A key issue is the use of parenting competency tests (FKUs), which critics argue are culturally biased, administered in Danish, and do not accurately predict parenting skills. These concerns have led to Greenlandic parents being significantly more likely to have their children placed in care compared to Danish parents.

While Denmark banned the use of these tests on Greenlandic families in May, the process of reviewing past cases where children were taken away is moving slowly. Families like Keira's and Johanne's describe heartbreaking separations and distress caused by the assessments, with allegations of demeaning and culturally insensitive questioning.

Although some families hope for reunification, particularly those whose children were not adopted, the path is challenging. The Danish government has committed to reviewing cases, but many Greenlandic families continue to fight for the return of their children, fearing further separation and cultural disconnect.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
FKUs are assessments used in complex welfare cases to evaluate parental fitness, involving interviews, cognitive tasks, and personality testing.
Critics argue FKUs are culturally biased, administered in Danish, and do not accurately predict parenting ability, leading to unfair child removals.
Denmark banned FKUs for Greenlandic families and is reviewing past cases, though the process of returning children has been slow.

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