Aboriginal child restoration from out-of-home care: pathways for success

Start date
Research partner(s)
University of New South Wales

The soaring rates of Indigenous children living in out-of-home care requires an urgent response. This research aims to considerably advance the knowledge regarding child restoration by investigating the lived experiences and outcomes of Aboriginal parents whose children have been restored from care. The project intends to identify successful child restoration initiatives and produce an empirical roadmap for navigating service systems with the goal of restoration. The project expects to make a substantial contribution to this largely neglected research area that will benefit birth parents and families, communities, practitioners, policy makers and academics. In doing so, it aspires to reduce the prevalence of Aboriginal children in care.

Output(s)

Restoration from out-of-home care for Aboriginal children: Evidence from the pathways of care longitudinal study
Type
Journal article
Authors
B.J. Newton, Ilan Katz, Paul Gray, Solange Frost, Yalemzewod Gelaw, Nan Hu, Raghu Lingam, Jennifer Stephensen,
Publisher
Child Abuse & Neglect
Publication date
Rights notice
0145-2134/©2023ElsevierLtd.Allrightsreserved.