Restoring Children From Out-of-Home Care: Insights From an Aboriginal-Led Community Forum

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 FAMILY STUDIES
B. J. Newton, Paul Gray, Kyllie Cripps, Kathleen Falster, Ilan Katz, Kimberly Chiswell, Lisa Wellington, Richard Ardler, Fiona Frith, Tori Jones, Mandy Kent, Neika Tong
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Abstract

Restoring children from out-of-home care (OOHC) to their families is the preferred outcome for all children removed by child protection services, yet little is known about how restoration processes are experienced by families and services supporting them. This paper provides important insights about Aboriginal child restoration from 40 practitioners and stakeholders at a community forum led by Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations in regional New South Wales (NSW), Australia. This is one component of larger Aboriginal-led research, which investigates child protection experiences and pathways to successful restoration in NSW and the data source for this paper. The community forum explored the issues for families navigating family preservation, OOHC and restoration within child protection and legal systems. Findings include the need for a continuum of support for families throughout their engagement with child protection systems and crucially following the removal of their children. Barriers to effective restoration practice included a lack of access to meaningful and ongoing preservation services, insufficient cultural care planning and family finding efforts that are often too late, the pressure on services to support families without adequate capabilities or enough resourcing, the lack of transparency and the complexities in navigating the restoration process, and the lack of culturally informed support for children and their families while children are in care. Implications for policy and practice are discussed. This paper contributes to understanding practice, processes and barriers for restoration, particularly focused on the perspectives of Aboriginal families and communities, with potential insights for practice within Australia and internationally.

让儿童摆脱家庭外照料:原住民主导的社区论坛的启示
让脱离家庭照料(OOHC)的儿童重返家庭,是所有被儿童保护服务机构带走的儿童的首选结果,但人们对家庭和支持家庭的服务机构如何体验儿童重返家庭的过程却知之甚少。在澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)地区由原住民社区控制组织(Aboriginal Community Controlled Organisations)牵头举办的一次社区论坛上,40 名从业人员和利益相关者就原住民儿童恢复问题发表了重要见解。这是由原住民主导的大型研究的一部分,该研究调查了新南威尔士州的儿童保护经验和成功恢复的途径,也是本文的数据来源。社区论坛探讨了家庭在儿童保护和法律体系内进行家庭保护、OOHC 和恢复时遇到的问题。研究结果包括,在家庭参与儿童保护系统的整个过程中,尤其是在孩子被带走后,需要为家庭提供持续的支持。有效恢复做法的障碍包括:无法获得有意义的、持续的保护服务;文化照料规划和寻找家庭的努力不足,而且往往为时已晚;在没有适当能力或足够资源的情况下,为家庭提供支持的服务压力大;恢复过程缺乏透明度和复杂性;以及在儿童受照料期间,缺乏对儿童及其家庭的文化支持。本文讨论了对政策和实践的影响。本文有助于理解恢复的实践、过程和障碍,尤其侧重于原住民家庭和社区的观点,对澳大利亚和国际实践具有潜在的启示意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
5.90%
发文量
92
期刊介绍: Child and Family Social Work provides a forum where researchers, practitioners, policy-makers and managers in the field of child and family social work exchange knowledge, increase understanding and develop notions of good practice. In its promotion of research and practice, which is both disciplined and articulate, the Journal is dedicated to advancing the wellbeing and welfare of children and their families throughout the world. Child and Family Social Work publishes original and distinguished contributions on matters of research, theory, policy and practice in the field of social work with children and their families. The Journal gives international definition to the discipline and practice of child and family social work.
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