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How do we respond to harm faced by young people beyond their front
doors? Can practitioners keep young people safe at school, in their
neighbourhoods or with their friends when social care systems are
designed to work with families? The Contextual Safeguarding
approach has transformed how policy makers, social care leaders,
practitioners and researchers understand harm that happens to young
people in their communities and what is required to respond. Since
2015 it has been tested across the UK and internationally. This
book shares stories from child sexual exploitation, child criminal
exploitation and peer violence about what has been learnt on this
journey. For anyone interested in how we safeguard young people
beyond their front doors, this book shows how much we have achieved
and raises big questions about what more we need to do to ensure
young people are safe – whatever the context.
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.
During adolescence, young people are exposed to a range of risks
beyond their family homes including sexual and criminal
exploitation, peer-on-peer abuse and gang-related violence.
However, it has only been over the past two decades that the
critical safeguarding implications of these harms have started to
be recognised. Social care organisations are increasingly
experimenting with new approaches but continue to experience
challenges in supporting affected young people and their families.
This book analyses the results of the first rapid evidence
assessment of social care organisations' responses to risks and
harms outside the home across 10 countries. The authors highlight
key areas for service development, give insights into how these
risks and harms can be understood, and consider wider implications
for policy and practice.
How do we respond to harm faced by young people beyond their front
doors? Can practitioners keep young people safe at school, in their
neighbourhoods or with their friends when social care systems are
designed to work with families? The Contextual Safeguarding
approach has transformed how policy makers, social care leaders,
practitioners and researchers understand harm that happens to young
people in their communities and what is required to respond. Since
2015 it has been tested across the UK and internationally. This
book shares stories from child sexual exploitation, child criminal
exploitation and peer violence about what has been learnt on this
journey. For anyone interested in how we safeguard young people
beyond their front doors, this book shows how much we have achieved
and raises big questions about what more we need to do to ensure
young people are safe – whatever the context.
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