Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
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Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
www.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2duties owed by local authorities towards looked after children.•The duty to provide accommodation as an aspect of service provision.•Outcomes for looked after children•Local authority and private fostering.•Residential accommodation and secure accommodation.•The role of the independent visitor.•Supp Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2ort for young people leaving care.www.downloadslide.netCHAPTER 10 LOOKED AFTER CHILDRENTalking PointThe responsibilities of the Independent ReviewingEbook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
Officer were considered in detail in A and s (Children) V. Lancashire County Council [2012] EWHC (Fam) 1689, a case which unfortunately demonstrates hwww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2of the rights guaranteed by Articles 3,6 and 8 and damages were awarded.Two brothers were freed for adoption as infants but no adoptive placement was ever found for them. By the time their case was heard by the High Court they were aged 16 and 14. Their care history comprised experience of multiple Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2placements, 77 and 96 respectively. They suffered physical and sexual abuse in at least two placements and were described as becoming increasingly unsEbook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
ettled and disturbed. The boys had lost contaơ with their birth family despite requests for contact, no substitute permanent family was found and nobowww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2cer identified in the case had chaired 16 reviews and accepted that he had not earned out his monitoring role effectively in providing a safeguard for the boys. It was noted that he had at times a caseload which was three times good practice guidance and that he lacked training and recourse to legal Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2 advice. The court noted that, ’These were children with increasingly complex needs, but there is no record of any serious consideration being given tEbook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
o important questions such as whether keeping them together was in their interests, nor an acknowledgement of the possible value and purpose of familywww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2learly highlights concerns that the IRO role was not effective in providing an independent safeguard for looked after children. Similar concerns were found by Ofsted in a report in 2013 which found the role was underdeveloped and IROs needed to be more effective in challenging drift and delay.\_____ Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2______________________________________________________________yIntroductionLooked after children (LAC) are those children who are accommodated by theEbook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
local authority, away from their family, in a residential or foster placement, placed or authorised to be placed for adoption, and all children who arwww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2mergency protection order or police protection and also children subject to a criminal supervision order with residence or detained under the grave crimes provision of the children and Young Persons Act 1933, s. 53. From the implementation of LASPO all children and young people remanded in youth det Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2ention accommodation will have LAC status.rhe accommodation (provided for a continuous period of more than 24 hours’) may be provided on a voluntary bEbook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
asis, or under the authority of a care order or other court order. Accommodation may be provided on a long-term basis or a series of planned short-terwww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2 LOOKED AFTER CHILDRf NIhe local authority is often described as the corporate parent' of looked after children and has a range of responsibilities towards them.* Improving the role of the corporate parent and outcomes for looked after children was considered in 'Care Matters: lime for change' (2007 Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2)1 with some of those recommendations given effect in the children and Young Persons Act 2008.There are a significant number of looked after children.Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
On 31 March 2013, 68,110 children were looked after. About 42 per cent of those children return home within eight weeks but many will need to be lookwww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2egal status of LAC includes children accommodated under s. 20 and children under a care order (59 per cent). Five per cent lived with their parents with social services input, five per cent were placed for adoption, and nine per cent were is secure units, children's homes and hostels.4 There were 1, Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2860 looked after unaccompanied asylum-seeking children in England in 2013.This chapter will consider the duties towards looked after children, includiEbook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
ng the obligation to provide suitable accommodation, rhe material is structured to reflect the child's journey through placement leading to independenwww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2on (see Chapter 11). A clear preference has emerged from official publications for greater use of adoption for looked after children. A total of 3,980 looked after children were adopted during the year ending 31 March 2008?The chapter moves on to consider a range of alternative options for looked af Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2ter children offering some degree of permanence, namely fostering and residential accommodation, and includes discussion of secure accommodation. FinaEbook Social work law (4/E): Part 2
lly, the responsibilities of local authorities towards looked after children who cease to be looked after, under the children (Leaving Care) Act 2000 www.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The d Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2are set out in the Children Act 1989, s. 22. The Children and Young Persons .Act 2008 replaced s. 23 of the Children Act 1989 with new provisions 22A-F. rhe new provisions emphasise that the local authority has a duty to provide a child in its care with accommodation and to maintain the child in oth Ebook Social work law (4/E): Part 2er respects.[3It shall be the duty of a local authority looking after any child -www.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The dwww.downloadsl’Chapter 10Looked after childrenLearning objectivesTo develop an understanding of the following:•The term 'looked after children'.•The dGọi ngay
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