Épisodes

  • Episode 31: Providing psychosocial support following wildfires. Featuring Paicabi
    Dec 8 2025

    En este episodio, Ron Gutiérrez, Director Clínico de Servicios Legales para Niños y miembro del consejo de Family for Every Child, habla con Denisse Pérez, coordinadora de proyectos en Paicabi, sobre el proyecto Wara, una iniciativa única en respuesta a los incendios forestales de 2024 en Chile.

    Si bien la ayuda inicial se centró en viviendas y necesidades básicas, Paicabi reconoció que la verdadera recuperación de los niños también implicaba sanación emocional. El Proyecto Wara, llamado así por la palabra quechua que significa "amanecer", trajo esperanza y renovación mediante el arte, la narración de cuentos y el juego para ayudar a los jóvenes sobrevivientes a expresar y replantear sus experiencias.

    A través de actividades prácticas y la construcción de memoria colectiva, niños, familias y profesionales convirtieron las historias de trauma en pilares para la resiliencia, impulsando conversaciones más amplias sobre cómo la respuesta a emergencias debe centrarse en el bienestar de los niños. Escuchamos lecciones sobre innovación, comunidad y el poder transformador de la creatividad en la respuesta a desastres.


    In this episode Ron Gutierrez, Clinical Director at Legal Services for Children and Family for Every Child trustee speaks to Denisse Perez, Project co-ordinator at Paicabi about the Wara project, a unique initiative responding to the 2024 wildfires in Chile.

    While the initial aid focused on homes and basic needs, Paicabi recognized that true recovery for children also meant emotional healing. The Wara Project, named for the Quechua word for "dawn," brought hope and renewal by using art, storytelling, and play to help young survivors express and reframe their experiences.

    Through hands-on activities and collective memory-building, children, families, and professionals turned stories of trauma into building blocks for resilience, sparking broader conversations on how emergency response must centre children’s wellbeing. We hear lessons on innovation, community, and the transformative power of creativity in disaster response.

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    30 min
  • Podcast #30: Kinship Care in Aotearoa New Zealand with Dr. Braden Clark
    Oct 8 2025

    To mark Kinship Care week 2025 Amanda is joined by Dr. Braden Clark, Founder and CEO of Relate Services and co-author of Family’s latest publication; Strengthening Kinship Care in Aotearoa New Zealand.

    Kinship care is the most widely used form of alternative care globally. And can lead to better outcomes in health, education, and emotional well-being than other forms of alternative care, yet it is often under resourced and poorly supported.

    Amanda and Braden discuss the limitations of current child protection systems, and highlights the urgent need for culturally inclusive, community-led solutions which reflect the lived experience of kinship carers and the children they care for.

    To find out more about Kinship Care week visit: familyforeverychild.org/global-kinship-care-week

    And sign up to our community of practice at: changemakersforchildren.community/landing-page/kinship-care-community

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    30 min
  • Episode 29: Children on the Move: advocating for unaccompanied minors. Featuring Flüchtlingsrat Niedersachsen (Germany)
    Jun 4 2025

    This is the third of three podcasts focusing on approaches to support the integration of Children on the Move from the Middle East and other countries to Europe. Since 2020 Family for Every Child member organizations in Italy, Greece, Germany, UK and Lebanon have been working together to develop, share and implement practices. This process of collaboration led to the creation of the Supporting Integration toolkit, designed for practitioners working with children and young people on the move.

    In this episode Georgina Bereton Etheridge, Programme Advisor at Family for Every Child is joined by Friederike Vorwergk from Flüchtlingsrat Niedersachsen (The Refugee Council of Lower Saxony) to discuss the the integration of unaccompanied children and young people on the move into Europe, with a particular focus on Germany.

    As of late 2023, there were around 41,800 unaccompanied minors under the responsibility of German services, primarily from Afghanistan and Syria. Friederike highlights challenges such as long waiting times for asylum decisions, lack of guardians, and inadequate accommodation.

    The "Know Your Rights" project which provides information and support to young refugees and youth welfare professionals. Friederike emphasises the need for international solidarity, proper implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and a shift in political discourse to prioritise refugee rights and participation.

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    17 min
  • Episode 28: Children on the Move: supporting the integration of unaccompanied minors. Featuring Programma Integra (Italy)
    May 6 2025

    This is the second of three podcasts focusing on approaches to support the integration of Children on the Move from the Middle East and other countries to Europe. Since 2020 Family for Every Child member organizations in Italy, Greece, Germany, UK and Lebanon have been working together to develop, share and implement practices. This process of collaboration led to the creation of the Supporting Integration toolkit, designed for practitioners working with children and young people on the move.

    In this episode Laura Bianconi, Head of International Projects, Research and Training at Programma Integra (PI) is joined by her colleague Elisa Moscato to discuss how PI supports this group of children and young people when they arrive in Italy, and beyond. They discuss the challenges faced by unaccompanied minors in Italy, and PI’s work to support their integration, which ranges across language, documentation, access to education and work opportunities, physical and mental healthcare, ensuring they are clear about their rights, and more. The importance of relationship building and trust is also highlighted.

    This episode has been recorded in Italian. You can find the English transcript here.

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    23 min
  • Episode 27: Children on the Move: a holistic approach to supporting integration. Featuring CFAB (UK)
    Mar 24 2025

    This is the first of three podcasts focusing on approaches to support the integration of Children on the Move from the Middle East and other countries to Europe. Since 2020 Family for Every Child member organizations in Italy, Greece, Germany, UK and Lebanon have been working together to develop, share and implement practices. This process of collaboration led to the creation of the Supporting Integration toolkit, designed for practitioners working with children and young people on the move.

    In this episode Amanda Griffith, CEO of Family for Every Child is joined by Chloe Hubert, Post-Placement Support Worker at Children and Families Across Borders (CFAB) to discuss the integration of unaccompanied minors from the Middle East to Europe.

    Over 4,000 unaccompanied minors applied for asylum in the UK in 2024, of which 74% granted refugee status. But a lack of support for these children, including minimal engagement from social services and long waits for legal representation, mean many children are still failing to get the support they need.

    Chloe explains how CFAB focuses on promoting culturally inclusive practices. And uses a holistic approach to support integration; focusing on education, housing, and mental health. With the ambition to ensure 95% of families remain together post-intervention.

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    31 min
  • Episode 26: Decolonising Funding, featuring Pendekezo Letu (Kenya) and Undugu Society (Kenya)
    Feb 11 2025

    In this podcast Amanda is joined by leaders of two Family for Every Child member organisations based in Nairobi, Kenya. Okari Magati is the Executive Director of Pendekezo Letu and Eric Mukoya is Executive Director of Undugu Society of Kenya.

    At Family we know that local CSOs are best placed to deliver change that reflects the cultural, social, economic and practical realities of their communities. But funding continues to be delivered via international NGOs and intermediaries who often continue to perpetuate a culture of dependency. In addition, burdensome requirements around reporting can effectively shut local organisations out of competing for funding. So what can be done to decolonise grant making and ensure grass roots organisations are properly resourced to deliver meaningful change?

    Eric and Okari provide insights into the challenges facing CSOs in accessing grants, talk donor bias, the essential nature of core funding and offer advice to funders on how to decolonise their processes to achieve effective, sustainable change.

    This podcast was recorded before the announcement of the USAid freeze in January 2025.

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    30 min
  • Episode 25: Engaging Vulnerable Youth in Advocacy - New Zealand
    Jan 21 2025

    In this episode Amanda is joined by three representatives of Pillars Ka Pou, a New Zealand based charity which exists to support the children and families of people in prison or serving a community sentence.

    We hear about the work of the Youth Advisory Panel, which launched in 2022 to directly engage young people with lived experience and amplify their voices. The panel has been involved in important initiatives, including rewriting the Bill of Rights for children of incarcerated parents and advocating for the creation of a "navigator" role in the criminal justice system to provide wraparound support for families.

    We also hear about the strong emphasis Pillars’ places on Maori values and culture, which shape the organization's approach and engagement with young people.

    Despite the challenging political and economic environment in New Zealand, Pillars has remained committed to its values-driven approach and continues to work closely with the Youth Advisory Panel to drive positive change in the justice system and improve outcomes for children and families.

    Find out more at www.pillars.org.nz

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    40 min
  • Episode 24: Supporting Mental Wellbeing in Children, Families and Communities - Approaches from Three Continents
    Jan 8 2024

    In this episode Amanda is joined by representatives of three member organisations who are working to support children's mental health and wellbeing across three continents.

    Omattie Madray, Managing Director of ChildLinK, in Guyana, Chaste Uwihoreye, Country Director at Uyisenga Ni Imanzi in Rwanda and Rita Panicker, Director of Butterflies, in India.


    The panel discussed how mental wellbeing is a topic that must be addressed at community rather than an individual level and how typically western ideas around therapeutic approaches translate to different contexts.


    This podcast builds on the research each organisation has been conducting as part of a practice exchange project. All three reports can be found here.

    At Family for Every Child we know that Children who are emotionally well are more likely to develop strong and healthy minds, and to have better lives in the future. And it is this knowledge that underpins our Emotions Matter campaign.

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    1 h et 15 min