Fifty years ago the Children Act (1948) created the
modern child care service in England and Wales. Then, as
now, the preferred form of state-provided care for children
was foster, rather than residential, care. However,
the nature of foster family care has changed considerably
over the past 50 years and, in some respects, so have the
children fostered. Then the predominant form of foster
care was long-term care, in keeping with the prevailing
ideology of “rescuing” children from intolerable home
conditions. Now, by contrast, foster care is a much more
diverse service, and the commonest form is short-term
care, which is generally understood as care intended to
last less than roughly 3 months. This is in keeping with a
strong ideology in both the U.S.A. and the U.K. that
foster care is not parenting, and that almost all children
are best off with their biological parents.