doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200000936

Article type: Original Research

PUBLISHED 1 January 2010

Volume 35 Issue 1

Children in foster care – Five years on

Paul Delfabbro, Daniel King and James Barber

Affiliations

1 University of Adelaide, paul.delfabbro@adelaide.edu.au

2 University of Adelaide

3 University of New England

Contributions

Paul Delfabbro -

Daniel King -

James Barber -

CITATION: Delfabbro P., King D., & Barber J. (2010). Children in foster care – Five years on. Children Australia, 35(1), 1740. doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200000936

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Abstract

This paper reviews the findings of the South Australian longitudinal study and the extent to which findings are borne out in subsequent national and international research. Included in this paper is an analysis of several issues in out-of-home care, including the disparity between child and carer numbers, the nature and effects of placement instability, the complexity of child behaviour and family contact. Using some recent findings of the ongoing National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well-being (NSCAW) study in the United States, the paper shows how many of the South Australian findings have been also borne out in other studies with larger sample sizes and more sophisticated measures. These comparisons suggest that the out-of-home care experiences of children living in both countries may share many similarities. Findings obtained in either country may be more easily translated to inform policy and practice internationally than has been previously thought.

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