Foster Children

Where They Go and How They Get On

Ian Sinclair, Ian Gibbs, Claire Baker, et al.

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Jessica Kingsley Publishers img Link Publisher

Belletristik / Gegenwartsliteratur (ab 1945)

Beschreibung

What happens to looked-after children in the longer term? This book analyses the outcomes of a large-scale study of foster children in the UK. It includes individual case studies and draws extensively on the views of foster children themselves. The authors examine:

Why children remain fostered or move to different settings (adoption, residential care, their own families or independent living)

How the children fare in these different settings and why

What the children feel about what happens to them.

Other important issues covered include the support given to birth families to enable children to return home, the experience of adopters, the ways in which foster care can become more permanent and the experiences of young people in independent living.

In bringing together these results the book provides a wealth of findings, many of them new and challenging. It offers positive and practical recommendations and will be an enduring resource for practitioners, academics, policy makers, trainers, managers and all those concerned with the well-being of looked-after children.

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Schlagwörter

books for adopted children, fostering, books on fostering, Adopted children, books for adoptive parents, books on adoption, safeguarding children, attachment disorder, developmental trauma, working with trauma, books on trauma, adoption