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A system that cares: A manifesto for care-experienced children and young people

In light of the upcoming general election, we are asking each party to ensure that care-experienced children and young people are priorities in their manifestos.

A system that cares: A manifesto for care-experienced children and young people outlines the key things we’d like every political party to consider including within their own manifestos ahead of the December 2019 election.

We want to see:

  • A comprehensive independent review of the care system which listens to children and adults with lived experience of care to address culture, policy and practice.
  • Long-term stability as the goal for every child in care, delivered by increased capacity across foster and residential care and better support for kinship carers and birth families. There should be independent scrutiny where a child experiences repeated home moves.
  • Relationships as a key consideration in all decisions, encouraging continuity through childhood to adulthood and supporting a sense of identity and belonging. No young person should be separated from their siblings apart from in exceptional circumstances and ‘contact’ with siblings should be afforded the same importance as with birth parents.
  • Improved support for those leaving care and an end to uncertainty about where young people will live, with no young person forced to move on their 18th birthday and consistency in support until the age of 25.
  • Additional funding for expanded Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services to deliver trauma-informed support to all care-experienced young people until the age of 25.

A system that cares (2019)

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