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Relationships with family members and transition from out-of-home care: Unfinished business

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  • Boman, Madonna

Abstract

Young people leave out-of-home care (foster, kinship and residential care) in Queensland before their 18th birthday because as adults they are no longer children in need of protection. The state withdraws from the role of mediator for family relationships, whether with carers or original (birth) family, leaving young people and their adult family members free to negotiate how much contact, if any they have. Generally, young Australians are staying in the family home longer and coming and going from the family home well into their twenties, with housing affordability and precarity in employment and employment pathways as factors in this. Not a lot is known about the adult relationships of children with their parents, carers and other family members. Young people leaving care have fewer options to remain housed while they finish school, continue studying, find work or just explore their options. Through qualitative interviewing and ethnography with young people in south east Queensland, aged 18–23 years of age who had lived in out-of-home care as teenagers, this paper describes young people’s family relationships as they establish their adult lives. They reflect on their experiences of disruption in childhood and their experiences after leaving care to demonstrate the dynamic, complex, and enduring nature of relationships with family during the transition out of care.

Suggested Citation

  • Boman, Madonna, 2022. "Relationships with family members and transition from out-of-home care: Unfinished business," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 143(C).
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:cysrev:v:143:y:2022:i:c:s0190740922002985
    DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2022.106662
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Malvaso, Catia G. & Delfabbro, Paul H., 2020. "Description and evaluation of a trial program aimed at reunifying adolescents in statutory long-term out-of-home care with their birth families: The adolescent reunification program," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 119(C).
    2. Schelbe, Lisa, 2018. "Struggles, successes, and setbacks: Youth aging out of child welfare in a subsidized housing program," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 89(C), pages 298-308.
    3. Chris Ryan, 2014. "Youth Allowance and the Financial Position of Young Australians," Australian Economic Review, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, vol. 47(1), pages 115-123, March.
    4. Samuels, Gina Miranda, 2009. "Ambiguous loss of home: The experience of familial (im)permanence among young adults with foster care backgrounds," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 31(12), pages 1229-1239, December.
    5. Mendes, Philip & Standfield, Rachel & Saunders, Bernadette & McCurdy, Samone & Walsh, Jacinta & Turnbull, Lena, 2021. "Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (Indigenous) young people leaving out-of-home care in Australia: A national scoping study," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 121(C).
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    1. Wulleman, Lara & Grietens, Hans & Noens, Ilse & Vliegen, Nicole, 2023. "(Re)defining family: A systematic review and meta-synthesis of foster children’s views of family in non-kinship foster care," Children and Youth Services Review, Elsevier, vol. 155(C).

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