Abstract
In December 1997, South Australia's alternative care system was radically
restructured along ‘funder-purchaser-provider’ lines. A recent
progress report into the workings of the new system (Barber, Cooper and
Delfabbro, 1999) identified high levels of frustration and dissatisfaction
throughout the sector. This article argues that the current problems in
alternative care are a legacy of policy decisions by successive state governments,
some of which date back many years. The most important of
these are the nationwide demise of residential care, the unhelpful role of
the state under the ‘funder-purchaser-provider’ model, and the decision
to outsource the entire foster care service through competitive tender.
The article concludes that the state's policy preference for distancing
itself from service delivery is incompatible with the community's growing
reluctance to volunteer.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Cited by
14 articles.
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