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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Mansfield Traquair Centre, 15 Mansfield Place, Edinburgh, EH3 6BB. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

Young Scots who grew up in care are spreading love globally

This opinion piece is almost 8 years old
 

Duncan Dunlop explains the role that young care experienced Scots have played in moulding a more loving care system in New Zealand

The New Zealand government has announced its current care system “does not meet the needs of vulnerable children and young people and does not help them achieve long term positive outcomes.”

Its minister for social development, Anne Tolley, went on to describe how the current reality was in need of transformational change. She was clear: “A bold overhaul of the system is required to place the child and their need for a stable, loving family at its centre.”

This announcement, made in a room more than 11,000 miles away, is big news for everyone connected to delivering care, and particularly for Scotland because we played a significant part in creating it.

Duncan Dunlop

It was clear to me that whether they are from Hamilton, Waikato or Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, those brought up in care have a common experience and a common bond

Duncan Dunlop

A little over a year ago minister Tolley and key civil servants were on a European tour aiming to learn what would make the difference in transforming care in New Zealand. We hosted them at Who Cares? Scotland where she met Tony and Thomas, two of our care-experienced campaigners. The minister was intrigued to hear how care experienced people had been involved in shaping Scotland’s Children and Young People Act.

A few weeks later I was invited to join an advisory panel in New Zealand to oversee a review of their national Child Youth and Family agency. Tony came with me for the first month and spent the time meeting care experienced people and talking about his life. It was clear to me that whether they are from Hamilton, Waikato or Hamilton, South Lanarkshire, those brought up in care have a common experience and a common bond.

The product of my time spent on the panel has been the ambitious and a radical report that has been published. Critics may be sceptical about its potential to have a significant impact on the lives of New Zealand’s most vulnerable children – New Zealand has had 14 reviews of its national children and families agency and no meaningful improvements have occurred. I believe, however, this is different.

The New Zealand review questions the fundamental structures, functions, and culture of care. It asked where the power in the care system really lies and suggests an independent organisation, like Who Cares? Scotland, is formed in New Zealand to answer that question.

There are a number of firsts in the report. It questions how vulnerable children are viewed and supported within their communities and what role all New Zealanders can play in making life better for care experienced young people. Love, and the need for care experienced young people to be loved, is mentioned 124 times.

It also takes an investment approach to delivering care, calculating how much money is saved over a life-course if a government supports people to live happy, healthy and productive lives. As a result, the government has committed $1.3 billion (£630 million) to making this happen.

It challenges the status quo by stating that “the love and care required by children and young people can only be provided through individuals and families, not through organisations or the state.”

This last finding poses a challenge to Scotland, as recent research by the Centre for Criminal and Youth Justice found that 6% of Scotland’s care experienced people go through secure care. In the latest Scottish Government statistics published, there has been a slight increase in our residential care population.

At the core of the New Zealand report is a belief that there are a great many New Zealanders who can create the communities and families that care experienced people can flourish in. The new model is reliant on many more Kiwis stepping forward and stating that they want to care, and the state trusting them with that responsibility. This isn’t about a recruitment drive for foster carers, this is about making everyone in New Zealand realise that they can offer something to make the chances and outcomes of care experienced people better.

They have taken learning from Scotland and know that the route to this change isn’t a poster campaign or a glossy leaflet designed by a marketing firm. The route to change is care experienced people themselves. It will be their testimonies that demonstrate how citizens and communities either discriminated against them or improved their lives by making them feel like they belong. Care experienced people’s resonating ability to speak the truth, however hard it is to hear, will be central in keeping this process on course.

In Scotland we have never designed our care system. It has evolved for well over a century. The core question for us is whether Scotland’s care and protection system and the context and culture it operates within creates the best place to grow up as a vulnerable child? Does it give them the love in their lives they need to flourish? New Zealand didn’t think its system did: so it is reimagining it completely.

I do not believe that transplanting the New Zealand solution is necessarily the right goal for Scotland. What we should take from it though is that our current reality does not need to be tomorrow’s. What we believe is that the solution for Scotland primarily lies in the voices of the care experienced population. We gave New Zealand the confidence to embark on a transformational journey with their care experienced young people. It is now our time to go through this cathartic process, this is why we are very excited that all party leaders signed our 1,000 Voices manifesto.

I received an e-mail from minister Tolley thanking us for our support over the last year. She particularly thanked Tony, who she met in our offices in Scotland. She watched the young members of the New Zealand review’s youth advisory panel confidently speak to the media and she was thinking of the impact Tony had on building their belief. She felt proud and was sure Tony would too.

I certainly am because I know that care experienced young people in Scotland sparked a seismic shift that has now been felt on the other side of the world.

Duncan Dunlop is chief executive of Who Cares? Scotland