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Date: April 29, 2024 Mon

Time: 8:11 pm

Results for runaways (u.k.)

3 results found

Author: Rees, Gwyther

Title: Still Running 3: Early Findings from our Third National Survey of Young Runaways, 2011

Summary: A quarter of child runaways in the U.K (26 per cent) have been the victim of a harmful or dangerous experience, reveals shocking new research from The Children’s Society. Still Running 3, the first comprehensive picture of running away for under 16s for six years, also shows that one in five child runaways have begged, stolen or done 'other things' to survive. One in nine (11 per cent) was hurt or harmed on the last occasion they ran. One in six (18 per cent) children said they had slept rough, or stayed with, someone they had just met. Yet teachers, social workers, police and other professionals are not stepping in and supporting the vast majority of young runaways. Around two-thirds of children who run away are not 'visible' to professionals. The research also exposes, for the first time, that there is a very strong link between family relationships and running away. Children who have experienced family change are more than three times as likely to have run away in the past year as those who have not. Children who have experienced high family conflict are around six times as likely to have run away in the past year. Seven in ten runaways were not reported missing to police the last time they ran away. A quarter of child runaways were forced to leave home.

Details: London: The Children's Society, 2011. 46p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed November 15, 2011 at: http://makerunawayssafe.org.uk/sites/default/files/tcs/u24/Still-Running-3_Full-Report_FINAL.pdf

Year: 2011

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://makerunawayssafe.org.uk/sites/default/files/tcs/u24/Still-Running-3_Full-Report_FINAL.pdf

Shelf Number: 123361

Keywords:
Missing Children
Runaways (U.K.)

Author: Great Britain. Office for Standards in Education, Children's Services and Skills (Ofsted)

Title: Running away Young people’s views on running away from care Reported by the Children’s Rights Director for England

Summary: We asked children and young people in care or living away from home in residential education for their views at a big consultation event we held in the north of England. We invited children from different local authorities across the country, and did not just choose children we already knew or who were already in local participation groups or Children in Care Councils. We asked the children for their views in a series of discussion groups. At the same event, we ran other discussion groups to ask children and young people for their views on two other subjects for our next reports. These were keeping out of trouble and the use of physical restraint. We also visited a group of children at a northern local authority to discuss running away from care. Some of the children we met had run away from care themselves, some had thought about running away but had decided not to run. Some knew about running from care from other people, and others had no experience of their own about running from care, but gave us their thoughts on the subject. We did not ask children to declare to us or in front of others whether or not they had themselves run away from care – but many told us they had, and gave us their experiences. Altogether we held 10 discussion groups on the subject of running away. Each group was led by a member of the Office of the Children’s Rights Director, and another member of our team took notes of the views the children gave. Parents, carers, staff members and other adults who had brought children and young people to our discussion groups were not with the children during the discussions, so that the children could freely talk about their views. The only exception to this was that two members of staff of the local authority we visited did stay with the discussion group there. We gave children a shopping token to thank them for taking part in our discussions, and they were also able to take part in activities for young people at the activity centre where we held all but one of our discussions. At that centre, we also set up some electronic screens on which children could enter more views while they were waiting for our groups, or waiting to join activities, or during the lunch break. The answers typed on to those screens have been used in this report alongside what was said in the discussion groups. As in all our discussion groups, we asked open questions for discussion, but did not suggest any answers. We told the children and young people that they did not have to agree on any ‘group views’, but could give different views, could disagree without having to argue for their views against anyone else, and we would write down all their different views. We asked many of the same questions that we had asked six years before, for our 2006 report on running away, to see whether children’s views and experiences were different now and then. What is in this report is, as far as we could note them down, all the views given by the children and young people in the discussion groups, not our own views. We have not added our comments. We have not left out any views we might disagree with, or which the government, councils, professionals or researchers might disagree with. Where we have used a direct quote from what a child or young person said, this is either something that summarises well what many had said in a group, or something that was a clear way of putting a different idea from what others had said. As with all our reports of children’s views, we have done our best to write this report so that it can be easily read by young people themselves, by professionals working with young people and by politicians.

Details: Manchester, UK: Ofsted, 2012. 26p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed April 4, 2013 at: http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/running-away-2012

Year: 2012

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://www.ofsted.gov.uk/resources/running-away-2012

Shelf Number: 128262

Keywords:
Child Protection
Missing from Care
Runaways (U.K.)

Author: Smeaton, Emilie

Title: Running from hate to what you think is love: The relationship between running away and child sexual exploitation

Summary: Since the 1990s research focused on running away, child sexual exploitation (CSE) and youth homelessness has documented that an intrinsic relationship exists between running away and CSE. A review of this research literature (Smeaton, 2011)1 reveals that: - None of the research projects addressing running away have explored the issue of CSE in depth. A 2009 study (Smeaton, 2009) exploring the experiences of particularly vulnerable and marginalised young people who become detached from parents and carers for four weeks or more offers the most in-depth exploration of the relationship between running away and CSE. However, these findings cannot be applied to all young people who run away. - While sexual exploitation is experienced by some children and young people who run away, research findings suggest that the majority of young runaways do not experience CSE. - The limited evidence relating to practice responses to young people who run away suggest that, while there are examples of good practice, because of the challenges involved in working with young people who experience both running away and CSE, it can be difficult to achieve positive outcomes. - Previous research has started to explore the relationship between running away and CSE but there is need for research that explicitly explores this relationship. In recognition of this gap in learning, Barnardo's and Paradigm Research developed a proposal to undertake an action research study to address the relationship between running away and CSE in England, which was funded by Comic Relief. This report presents our findings.

Details: Ilford, UK: Barnardos, 2013. 63p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed July 23, 2013 at: http://www.barnardos.org.uk/15505_cse_running_from_hate_2l_web.pdf

Year: 2013

Country: United Kingdom

URL: http://www.barnardos.org.uk/15505_cse_running_from_hate_2l_web.pdf

Shelf Number: 129497

Keywords:
Child Prostitution
Child Sexual Exploitation
Runaways (U.K.)