The social care system and mixed race young people: placing the individual child at the heart of decision makingPosted in Family/Parenting, Live Events, New Media, Politics/Public Policy, United Kingdom on 2010-08-24 21:02Z by Steven |
People in Harmony
Central London, England
2010-11-11
A one-day conference from People in Harmony which will consider why mixed race young people are over-represented in the care system, how they fare in the system and beyond, and how existing procedures could be improved upon.
About the Conference
The emergence of a sizeable mixed race population provides us with the opportunity to look again at racial stereotyping, and at how public services engage with individuals who do not slot into a single racial group. The need for this is perhaps most acute in the area of looked after children and wider social care – the focus of this conference.
Mixed race young people are over-represented in the care system, which has important implications for their long term prospects. A number of reasons may contribute to explaining this over-representation – social class, cultural differences in attitudes to marriage and long term relationships, widely dispersed family and a consequent lack of informal support structures. However, the tendency of service providers to see ‘black’ children as separate from their white mothers and to question the ability of white mothers to raise ‘black’ children may also play a part.
There have been major disagreements about local authority policies which insist on the right ‘racial match’ between child and adoptive family (based on Children Act 1989 Section 22 (5) (c)). Much evidence suggests that the key to successful placements is not a good racial match, but the young person’s wishes and the warmth of the adoptive family.
This conference will seek to explore these difficult issues with openness and honesty, drawing on research and academic work, and on personal experience. It will provide delegates with an opportunity to consider:
- Whether too much time is spent finding the right label (is it dual heritage rather than mixed race, and does it really matter?).
- Why ‘racial matching’ between young people and adoptive families may have been over-emphasised at the expense of adopted children – has cultural competence simply become a new dogma?
- The direct experience of mixed race young people who have been in the care system.
- Why social class and social heritage means that outcomes are very different among mixed race young people.
- Whether there is sufficient support for parents, especially single parents, of mixed race children – and how this is informed by perception of white mothers with ‘black’ children.
- How the care system – including wider services like education and CAMHS – can work towards better outcomes?
Organisations which book places at this event are invited to take up free exhibition space to encourage an exchange of information and resources.
Certificates of attendance will be available.
For more information, click here.