
Two of last year’s must-read reports were Counting Lives, the Children’s Society’s extensive review of the emerging issue of child criminal exploitation, and Youth Resettlement, the Probation Inspectorate’s thematic inspection of the state of resettlement for children leaving custody.
On the face of it, they are about significantly different subjects. But one issue that anchors them together is the age-old problem of how we can really “lean in” to the worlds of children in trouble.
When I worked as a social worker in the 1970s and 1980s, this question was at the forefront of my mind with almost all the children with whom I worked. It remains the question of greatest significance today.
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