In Australia, as in a number of other nations, personal testimony has played a central role in achieving formal recognition of the great damage done by child welfare policies and practices of the past. Over time, public narratives have emerged around the experiences of particular groups—Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, people sent to Australia as child migrants, people who grew up in institutions, and families separated through adoption—yet within these, voices from people who experienced foster care have been largely absent despite their constituting a significant portion of people who grew up in out-of-home “care.” This article uses testimonies submitted to one of Australia’s national inquiries into historical child welfare s...
This chapter examines the range and form of narratives that give voice to approximately 500,000 'For...
The Australian child protection system is responsible for promoting the health and well-being of chi...
In both the UK and Australia, many thousands of children experience life in public care. Such experi...
Approximately 500,000 children were institutionalised in Australian orphanages and other forms of ch...
This study investigates the experiences of eight participants whose mothers had been institutionalis...
Over the twentieth century, it is estimated that at least half a million children were institutional...
During the twentieth century in Australia, more than half-a-million children grew up in 'out-of-home...
In 2004 a Senate Community Affairs Reference Committee published a report that described the harsh c...
This article examines the foster care (referred to as out-of-home care) of Aboriginal children in Au...
This research explored the experiences of care leavers, who lived in institutions (such as Children'...
In memories of institutionalized childhoods the physical shape of the orphanage looms large. Constru...
Conventional histories of children in institutional care are dominated by official voices justifying...
Recent parliamentary inquiries in Australia and elsewhere have highlighted the importance of records...
In both the UK and Australia, many thousands of children experience life in public care. Such experi...
Migrant camps were unsettling spaces for newly arrived families in post-war Australia. Post-WWII ref...
This chapter examines the range and form of narratives that give voice to approximately 500,000 'For...
The Australian child protection system is responsible for promoting the health and well-being of chi...
In both the UK and Australia, many thousands of children experience life in public care. Such experi...
Approximately 500,000 children were institutionalised in Australian orphanages and other forms of ch...
This study investigates the experiences of eight participants whose mothers had been institutionalis...
Over the twentieth century, it is estimated that at least half a million children were institutional...
During the twentieth century in Australia, more than half-a-million children grew up in 'out-of-home...
In 2004 a Senate Community Affairs Reference Committee published a report that described the harsh c...
This article examines the foster care (referred to as out-of-home care) of Aboriginal children in Au...
This research explored the experiences of care leavers, who lived in institutions (such as Children'...
In memories of institutionalized childhoods the physical shape of the orphanage looms large. Constru...
Conventional histories of children in institutional care are dominated by official voices justifying...
Recent parliamentary inquiries in Australia and elsewhere have highlighted the importance of records...
In both the UK and Australia, many thousands of children experience life in public care. Such experi...
Migrant camps were unsettling spaces for newly arrived families in post-war Australia. Post-WWII ref...
This chapter examines the range and form of narratives that give voice to approximately 500,000 'For...
The Australian child protection system is responsible for promoting the health and well-being of chi...
In both the UK and Australia, many thousands of children experience life in public care. Such experi...