Report of the 50 Key Thinkers Forum: Supporting families, whānau and communities to create their own solutions: a way forward

Report of the 50 Key Thinkers Forum: Supporting fa…
01 Jul 2011
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Chris Sola, 50 Key Thinkers (Part 1 of 2) | Presen…
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Chris Sola, 50 Key Thinkers (Part 2 of 2) | Prese…
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Rt Hon Bill English, 50 Key Thinkers (Part 2 of 2)
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Dame Iritana, 50 Key Thinkers (Part 1 of 2) | Pres…
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Dame Iritana, 50 Key Thinkers (Part 2 of 2) | Pre…
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Hon Paula Bennett, 50 Key Thinkers (Part 1 of 2) |…
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Hon Paula Bennett, 50 Key Thinkers (Part 2 of 2)
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The 50 Key Thinkers Forum, hosted by the Families Commission on 11 May 2011, was conceived as a starting point to ignite and reframe thinking about family and whānau support.

The forum brought together a collection of innovative thinkers and practitioners from across the social sector to discuss the future of family support in New Zealand.

There is continuing debate about how best to support families and whānau in New Zealand and the recent economic recession has made this issue more acute. Just as the Government’s ability to fund services is constrained, family and whānau support needs are increasing. Allocation of shrinking resources in a time of increasing need will be a major challenge during the next decade.

Previous research and evaluation has identified a number of failings in our support for families and whānau, for example:

  • poor social outcomes (eg child deaths, family violence)
  • fragmented services and lack of coordination between services
  • duplicated services and service gaps
  • support not reaching those most in need
  • poor implementation
  • lack of evidence of effectiveness

Currently, most funding is premised around the provision of services to families and whānau. Families and whānau are positioned as passive consumers in need of external professional help.

However, families and whānau have many strengths to draw upon when dealing with the problems they face; most understand what sort of support they actually need. From a strengths-based perspective, families and whānau are among the most pervasive and important infrastructures existing in New Zealand. Investment in them would yield social and economic benefits.

Families and whānau are the solution, not the problem. While there is discussion about current support needs, there is relatively little work being done on the future support needs of families and whānau.

It is time to accelerate thinking about the social services and support sector. New Zealand must be future-oriented. The Government needs assurance that public investments in support and services will yield the highest possible returns – for children, for their parents and for all of society

Page last modified: 15 Mar 2018