doi.org/10.1017/cha.2017.29

Article type: Original Research

PUBLISHED 1 September 2017

Volume 42 Issue 3

‘There's More to be Done; “Sorry” is Just a Word’: Legacies of Out-of-Home Care in the 20th Century

Elizabeth Fernandez, Jung-Sook Lee, Wendy Foote, Hazel Blunden, Patricia McNamara, Szilvia Kovacs and Paul-Auguste Cornefert

Affiliations

1 School of Social Sciences, G56 Morven Brown Building, UNSW Australia, High Street, Randwick, NSW, 2052, UNSW, Australia

2 School of Social Sciences, UNSW

3 Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Association of Children's Welfare Agencies

Correspondence

*Prof Elizabeth Fernandez

Contributions

Elizabeth Fernandez -

Jung-Sook Lee -

Wendy Foote -

Hazel Blunden -

Patricia McNamara -

Szilvia Kovacs -

Paul-Auguste Cornefert -

CITATION: Fernandez E., Lee J., Foote W., Blunden H., McNamara P., Kovacs S., & Cornefert P. (2017). ‘There's More to be Done; “Sorry” is Just a Word’: Legacies of Out-of-Home Care in the 20th Century. Children Australia, 42(3), 2085. doi.org/10.1017/cha.2017.29

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Abstract

This research explored the experiences of care leavers, who lived in institutions (such as Children's Homes and orphanages) or other forms of out-of-home care between 1930 and 1989. Participants included representatives of three sub-cohorts: Forgotten Australians, members of the Stolen Generations and Child Migrants. Employing mixed methods, this research used three forms of data collection: surveys (n = 669), interviews (n = 92) and focus groups (n = 77). This research concentrated on participants’ experiences in care, leaving care, life outcomes after care (education, employment, health, wellbeing and relationships), coping strategies and resilience, current service needs and usage and participation in organisations as well as the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Most participants experienced extreme neglect and abuse while in care. Leaving care, often after years of institutionalisation, was generally a frightening and demoralising process. Despite these challenges, a number of participants demonstrated remarkable resilience. For many, however, these experiences had negative consequences in adulthood including serious physical and mental health problems. This often made adult learning, paid employment and positive relationships virtually impossible. Most survivors carry high levels of trauma and complex unmet needs. Implications for policy, practice and services are drawn from key findings.

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