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Acknowledging the struggle : policy changes for state care leaving provisions Kerri Cleaver

By: Cleaver, Kerri.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work.Publisher: Aotearoa New Zealand Association of Social Workers, 2016ISSN: 2463-4131.Subject(s): ADOLESCENTS | CHILD PROTECTION | FOSTER CARE | SOCIAL POLICY | SOCIAL SERVICES | SOCIAL WORK | YOUNG PEOPLE | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: Click here to access online | Special issue In: Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2016, 28(2): 22-31Summary: "Neoliberalism is not kind to vulnerable populations. Care leavers as a vulnerable population have faired particularly poorly under successive governments. Policy and practice have maintained a position for decades in New Zealand where care leavers are responsible entirely for their own lives at the age of seventeen. This article reviews current literature, locally and internationally, in order to identify the needs of care leavers in the New Zealand context. It will question what is working already, what works elsewhere and how we might change the outcomes for these young people who have not chosen this path and yet appear to be punished through the government turning a blind eye." (Author's abstract). This article is published in a Special Issue on: Child protection, the family and the state: critical responses in neoliberal times. Record #5147
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Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work, 2016, 28(2): 22-31

"Neoliberalism is not kind to vulnerable populations. Care leavers as a vulnerable population have faired particularly poorly under successive governments. Policy and practice have maintained a position for decades in New Zealand where care leavers are responsible entirely for their own lives at the age of seventeen. This article reviews current literature, locally and internationally, in order to identify the needs of care leavers in the New Zealand context. It will question what is working already, what works elsewhere and how we might change the outcomes for these young people who have not chosen this path and yet appear to be punished through the government turning a blind eye." (Author's abstract). This article is published in a Special Issue on: Child protection, the family and the state: critical responses in neoliberal times. Record #5147