THE ROLES OF AGENCY AND STRUCTURE IN FACILITATING THE SUCCESSFUL TRANSITION OUT OF CARE AND INTO INDEPENDENT LIVING

Authors

  • Adrian D van Breda Department of Social Work University of Johannesburg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2415-5829/1349

Keywords:

youth transitions, youth studies, resilience, care-leaving, South Africa, micro-macro

Abstract

The vulnerability of young people leaving residential care has been widely noted in the literature, prompting research on the process of transitioning out of care and triggering debates between the roles of agency and structure in youth transitions. Care-leaving research and programmes from the West have tended to give primary attention to structural interventions, centred on the notion of ‘corporate parenting’. By contrast, South African research on care-leaving has tended to emphasise the agency of young people in exercising resilience in sub-optimal contexts. This article analyses findings from recent South African care-leaving research on the contributions of agency (particularly resilience at the micro level) and structure (particularly interventions at the macro level) to the successful transition out of care and into independent living. Evidence confirms the importance of considering both agency and structure, as well as the interaction between them.

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Published

2016-07-22

How to Cite

van Breda, Adrian D. 2016. “THE ROLES OF AGENCY AND STRUCTURE IN FACILITATING THE SUCCESSFUL TRANSITION OUT OF CARE AND INTO INDEPENDENT LIVING”. Southern African Journal of Social Work and Social Development 28 (1):36-52. https://doi.org/10.25159/2415-5829/1349.

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Articles