Abstract
ABSTRACT Today’s young people are critical stakeholders in the future of social care policy and services, but their voices and perspectives are often overlooked in public debate and deliberation on disability services, aged care, and support for family carers. This article reports on a pilot project involving focus groups with young people in the Australian Capital Territory, Australia. Participants included young people with caring roles for family members with disability and chronic illness and young people without lived experience of disability or care. The article explores how young people’s understandings of care were profoundly shaped by their experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic. Lockdowns, health concerns and media coverage heightened their awareness of the diverse ways in which people support each other in families and communities and the systemic issues afflicting the formal care sector. The article draws on the concept of care as critical social and economic infrastructure to frame participants’ proposals for future reform of policy and services. The findings indicate that young people both with and without current care roles want to see significantly more investment in the care and support sectors, and these groups view meaningful engagement with service users as key to improving access to needed supports.
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