Image from Google Jackets

Access to child-care records : a comparative analysis of UK and Australian policy and practice Journal

By: Goddard, Jim | Duncalf, Zachari | Murray, SuellenMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: British Journal of Social Work 2013Description: Journal ArticleISSN: 0045-3102Subject(s): Social work | Records - Management | Data protection | Child careDDC classification: Journals Online access: Open e-book (Ruskin students only) Summary: In both the UK and Australia, many thousands of children experience life in public care. Such experience usually takes place in foster-care. Less commonly, it takes place in residential care or sometimes a combination of foster and residential. However, the experience of growing up in public care is not solely located in childhood. Evidence from various sources shows that it can have a significant impact across a person's entire life course. Children in care will have had files kept on them. As adults, such former children in care often seek to address later concerns, or merely to assuage curiosity about their origins. Access to their child-care records can be a very important route to constructing a fuller account of their life and can help to resolve outstanding identity issues. This article outlines and analyses the differing policy and practice regimes for accessing these records in the UK and Australia—two countries that have seen significant developments in this area of work in recent decades. It also identifies future research needs, policy priorities and practice improvements in both countries.
Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Class number Status Date due Barcode Item reservations
Article Article Electronic publication Electronic publication Available
Total reservations: 0

<p>British Journal of Social Work Vol. 43 no. 4 (Jun. 2013), p. 759-774</p> <p>Available in library.&nbsp; See journal shelves.</p> <p>Available online.</p>

In both the UK and Australia, many thousands of children experience life in public care. Such experience usually takes place in foster-care. Less commonly, it takes place in residential care or sometimes a combination of foster and residential. However, the experience of growing up in public care is not solely located in childhood. Evidence from various sources shows that it can have a significant impact across a person's entire life course. Children in care will have had files kept on them. As adults, such former children in care often seek to address later concerns, or merely to assuage curiosity about their origins. Access to their child-care records can be a very important route to constructing a fuller account of their life and can help to resolve outstanding identity issues. This article outlines and analyses the differing policy and practice regimes for accessing these records in the UK and Australia—two countries that have seen significant developments in this area of work in recent decades. It also identifies future research needs, policy priorities and practice improvements in both countries.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.