Australia In Australia foster care was known as "boarding-out". Foster care had its early stages in
South Australia in 1867 and stretched to the second half of the 19th century. It is said that the system was mostly run by women until the early 20th century. Then the control was centered in many state children's departments. "Although boarding-out was also implemented by non-government[al] child rescue organizations, many large institutions remained. These institutions assumed an increasing importance from the late 1920s when the system went into decline." The system was re-energized in the postwar era, and in the 1970s. The system is still the main structure for "out-of-home care". The system took care of both local and foreign children. "The first adoption legislation was passed in
Western Australia in 1896, but the remaining states did not act until the 1920s, introducing the beginnings of the closed adoption that reached it peak in the period 1940–1975. New baby adoption dropped dramatically from the mid-1970s, with the greater tolerance of and support for single mothers".
Cambodia Foster care in
Cambodia is relatively new as an official practice within the government. However, despite a later start, the practice is currently making great strides within the country. Left with a large number of official and unofficial
orphanages from the 1990s, the Cambodian government conducted several research projects in 2006 and 2008, pointing to the overuse of orphanages as a solution for caring for vulnerable children within the country. Most notably, the studies found that the percentage of children within orphanages that had parents approached 80%. At the same time, local NGOs like "Children In Families" began offering limited foster care services within the country. In the subsequent years, the Cambodian government began implementing policies that required the closure of some orphanages and the implementation of minimum standards for
residential care institutions. These actions lead to an increase in the number of NGOs providing foster care placements and helped to set the course for care reform around the country. As of 2015, the Cambodian government is working with UNICEF, USAID, several governments, and many local NGOs in continuing to build the capacity for child protection and foster care within the Kingdom.
Canada Foster children in Canada are known as
permanent wards (
crown wards in Ontario). A
ward is someone, in this case a child, placed under protection of a
legal guardian and are the legal responsibility of the
government. Census data from 2011 counted children in foster care for the first time, counting 47,885 children in care. The majority of foster children – 29,590, or about 62 per cent – were aged 14 and under. The wards remain under the care of the government until they "age out of care". All ties are severed from the government and there is no longer any legal responsibility toward the youth. This age is different depending on the province.
Israel In December 2013, the Israeli
Knesset approved a bill co-drafted by the
Israel National Council for the Child to regulate the rights and obligations of participants in the foster care system in Israel.
Japan The idea of foster care or taking in abandoned children actually came about around 1392–1490s in Japan. The foster care system in Japan is similar to the Orphan Trains system of the US, thinking the children would do better on farms rather than living in the "dusty city". The families would often send their children to a farm family outside the village and only keep their oldest son. The farm families served as the foster parents and they were financially rewarded for taking in the younger siblings. "It was considered an honor to be chosen as foster parents, and selection greatly depended on the family's reputation and status within the village". Around 1895 the foster care program became more like the system used in the United States because the
Tokyo Metropolitan Police sent children to a hospital where they would be "settled". Problems emerged in this system, such as
child abuse, so the government started phasing it out and "began increasing institutional facilities". In 1948 the Child Welfare Law was passed, increasing official oversight, and creating better conditions for the children to grow up in.
United Kingdom In the United Kingdom, foster care and adoption has always been an option, "in the sense of taking other people's children into their homes and looking after them on a permanent or temporary basis." However, nothing about it had a legal foundation until the 20th century. The UK had "wardship", the family taking in the child had custody by the
Chancery Court. Wardship was not used very often because it did not give the guardian "parental rights". In the 19th century came a "series of baby farming scandals". At the end of the 19th century they started calling it "boarding-out" like they did in Australia. They started placing the children in
orphanages and
workhouses as well. "The First World War saw an increase in organized adoption through adoption societies and child rescue organizations, and pressure grew for adoption to be given legal status." The first laws based on adoption and foster care were passed in 1926. "The peak number of adoptions was in 1968, since then there has been an enormous decline in adoption in the United Kingdom. The main reasons for children being adopted in the United Kingdom had been unmarried mothers giving up their children for adoption and stepparents adopting their new partner's children".
United States Historians of foster care in America emphasize biases of race and class status that shaped divergent experiences for children. In particular, the United States welfare system has reckoned with a longer history of Black children taken away from their families during
slavery. Scholars have also documented the negative conditions faced by often impoverished children during the creation of early orphanages. Prior to protections of Tribes and the right of Indigenous children to remain within their tribal communities such as the 1978
Indian Child Welfare Act, child welfare concerns were cited as reasoning to remove 35% of Indigenous children from their families and tribes. In the United States, formal foster care started as a result of the efforts of
Charles Loring Brace, who founded the Children's Aid Society. Taking note that nearly 30,000 homeless or neglected children lived in New York City alone, Brace took these children off the streets and placed them with families around the United States, particularly Christian families living on farms, in an attempt to improve their quality of life. Between 1853 and his death in 1890, Brace transported over 120,000 children by train, giving name to the
Orphan Train Movement. When Brace died in 1890, his sons took over his work of the Children's Aid Society until they retired. As of August 2022 there were 368,530 children nationally located in foster homes. On average, an American child in foster care spends two birthdays in the system. To create a safe environment for the child long term, children in American foster care have both a case plan and a case plan goal. A case plan is a clear statement about why the child needs protection and the roles and responsibilities of all participants (case worker, foster parents, etc.) in addressing the child's needs and their protection. The case plan goal is the end goal for the child that ends their stay in foster care. 52% of foster children in America have the goal to reunify with their parent(s) or primary caretaker(s). from the government in order to welcome a minor or an elderly person. In order to receive this approval they must follow a training and their home is inspected to be sure it is safe and healthy. In 2017, 344,000 minors and 15,000 elderly persons were welcomed in foster homes. The Foundling Hospital in
Paris is often considered the first state efforts to assist children, founded in 1670 by
Saint Vincent de Paul. Mothers had the option of anonymously depositing their infant children at the gate, a practice that was unique across much of Europe.
Simple adoption, a form of additional parentage, was first codified into French law through the
Civil Code of 1804 and allowed only adults over fifty without any legitimate children to adopt. The specificity of a lack of legitimate children hoped to reduce interference with inheritance. Traditionally, there is an emphasis on keeping families in contact as much as possible as parents often keep parental responsibility . The majority of social services for these children relies on both local authorities and Judicial Juvenile Protection, which includes laws outlining protections allowed to the children. Current laws limit families to three children in foster care, but exceptions may be made by the president of the
Departmental Council in certain cases.
Italy Although the numbers have greatly decreased since post
World War II, over 27,000 children in Italy are in alternative care. Under 40% of children are able to return to their birth families, which is the ultimate goal of foster care. Italian law considers familial relationships to be pivotal to a child's developments and gives primary relevance to the original family and offer home based support. However, if neglect or abuse is present, the judicial system may intervene to remove involved children. In 2001, all institution based facilities for displaced children were closed and replaced with
residential homes in order to provide a more familial feeling. == Placement ==