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5.1. Many children are cared for in settings away from home. They need special attention to ensure that they are adequately safeguarded. Sir William Utting's report in 1997 People Like Us provided an influential and much-needed focus on children living away from home. Research suggests much has been done since the Utting report to improve safeguards for these children. They are now less marginalised than before, but the needs of some particularly vulnerable children still need to be addressed [refs.24, and 25].
5.2. Following the first Safeguarding Children report, inspection work has paid particular attention to children who live away from home. This chapter looks at how well agencies plan and deliver safeguards for children in a range of settings. In addition to inspection work, the findings are informed by the consultations of children looked after and in residential education carried out by the Children's Rights Director.
5.63 Recognition of the safeguarding needs of children who live away from home has increased since 2002. Agencies are now giving more priority to developing services for, consulting and communicating with, and ensuring safeguards for these children. There is evidence of improvement at a national level, for example in the attention given to safeguarding children in prison custody. There are also examples of strong commitment at senior levels to safeguarding children looked after, for example by elected members.
5.64 However, there are some areas of policy and practice in relation to children who live away from home that are in need of significant improvement. There is still an assumption that because these children are already in care or under supervision, they must be safe, despite the fact that the extent to which children themselves feel safe varies considerably. This level of complacency militates against effective safeguarding. Key areas for improvement include: