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Co-creation Projects

Challenging narratives. Amplifying voices. Creating change.

The Following Young Fathers Further team works in true partnership with young fathers and multi-agency professionals to co-create research, influence practice and policy, and develop innovative creative outputs. By placing young fathers at the heart of everything we do, we're dismantling deficit-based stereotypes and creating meaningful platforms for authentic voice and experience sharing.

Co-creation involves diverse stakeholders, including marginalised groups like young fathers, in collaborative research and innovations to develop contextually relevant solutions.

Our collaborative approach demonstrates that young fathers are not problems to be solved, but partners in solution-building. Through co-created research, policy advocacy, and creative expression, we showcase their expertise, resilience, and unwavering commitment to positive change, both for themselves and future generations of young parents.

Our research is based on:

  • Real partnerships.
  • Authentic voices.
  • Lasting impact.

Learn more about our co-creation projects by following the links below.

Co-creating new Young Dads Collective initiatives

Learn more about the Young Dads Collective that has been co-created in Leeds and Grimsby since 2016! A unique, evidence and place-based training and education model delivered by young fathers to multi-sector professionals!

Grimsby Dads Collective

co-creation
support

Since January 2020, we have been working in close partnership with young fathers in Grimsby, national childcare charity Coram Family and Childcare, and Grimsby based charities Together for Childhood (NSPCC) and YMCA Humber, to co-create and establish the Grimsby Dads Collective.

Read more about project
Girl on skateboard with young dad

Young Dads Collective North

co-creation

Empowering selected young fathers as experts by experience, to be supported and trained in advocacy work on behalf of other young fathers and to engage in practitioner training and consultation. The Young Dads Collective is designed to do just that.

Read more about project
Girl on skateboard with young dad

The Diverse Dads Peer Research Project

A peer research study co-designed with and for young fathers and the North East Young Dads and Lads. We co-researched how to improve outreach and support for minoritised and marginalised young fathers. The young dads conducted the interviews supported the analysis and shared the findings at a webinar.

Diverse Dads

co-creation

Supporting a collaboration between a small team of young men and fathers as peer researchers, NEYDL professional staff, the FYFF team and an advisory group of local and national experts

Read more about project
Girl on skateboard with young dad
Featured report

Diverse Dads reports

The Diverse Dads team launched two open access reports based on the outcomes of the research as the ‘Diverse Dads Collaborative. These include key research findings and recommendations for good practice, as informed by the young fathers and professionals who participated in the study.

Toolkit front cover

The 'What I Wish You Knew' video series for supporting professional practice!'

Co-created with the North East Young Dads and Lads and based on The Dynamics of Young Fatherhood hear from young fathers themselves about our research findings and what young dads want you to understand if you are supporting them in practice.

  • Video 1: Introduction: Young fatherhood, being a dad and co-parenting
  • Video 2: The Education and Employment pathways of young fathers

  • Video 3: Supporting young fathers: support, sidelining and surveillance

  • Video 4: Housing young fathers

  • Video 5: Co-creating with young fathers

The (young) father-inclusive practice interactive toolkit!

Co-created with the North East Young Dads and Lads to support professionals to understand their support needs, parenting experiences and what father-inclusion means to them!

Featured toolkit

Think Dad!

The Think Dad! Toolkit, co-created with young fathers and developed with professionals and services in mind who want to improve how they work with young fathers.

Toolkit front cover
Supporting Young Fathers community stamp

Supporting Young Fathers

You might have spotted our community stamp dotted around the website. This stamp has been created to represent our diverse and vibrant community of young fathers, professionals, researchers, and advocates. We share a vision of creating a more supportive environment for young fathers and their families.

Young fathers and peri-natal mental health series

Co-created with the North East Young Dads and Lads and available on DigiDAD, this 6-part video series was commissioned by Cumbria, Northumberland,Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust, as part of a project to explore how to enhance support, and improve care pathways for young fathers with peri-natal mental health concerns.

With approximately 1 in 10 Dad’s and 27% of mum’s likely to experience mental health issues during pregnancy and early parenthood, looking after yourself is an important part of looking after your baby. To help young fathers to understand perinatal mental health and how it can affect them, the young dads of the North East Young Dads and Lads have created a 6-part Perinatal Mental Health film series covering the following topics:

Episodes 1-6

  • Perinatal mental health from the perspectives of young dads
  • Just ask for help
  • Understanding perinatal mental health and post-natal depression
  • Supporting your partner and caring for yourself
  • Self-help and suicidal thoughts
  • Bereavement and loss of a child

These videos cover some sensitive topics so do bear that in mind before watching.

  • Video 1: Introduction: Perinatal mental health and young fathers
  • Video 2: (Please) Just ask for help
  • Video 3: Understanding perinatal mental health and post-natal depression
  • Video 4: Supporting your partner and caring for yourself
  • Video 5: Self harm and Suicidal Thoughts
  • Video 6: Beavement and loss of a child

From our partners and young dads

[daughter]'s almost two-year-old. She came up the house and she actually really liked it. Preferably my house is the best place for her to, for the contact to be, if I’m honest, 'cause we just buy toys for her all the time. We’ve got a lovely garden that she can play in, lovely, big, and we’ve got a sandpit in there. We’ve been buying loads of things for her to play with to keep her occupied.

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Nathan, 21
I was 17 when I had my child

[Speaking about support of young fathers] We’ve done a lot of kind of advocation and representing them, a lot of the time there’s involvement with statutory services. They don’t have the care of the young person, the care’s provided by the state or the mother, so we’ve attended lots of meetings with the young person to offer additional support and facilitated contact where necessary and offered just general emotional wellbeing, support, improving robustness and resilience, encouraging them to have as amicable relationship as possible.

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Housing Charity

And I suppose it goes back to what we were saying before about behaviours, maybe the education side of stuff and the fact that men aren’t involved in those early conversations, you know, whether it is, I know they’re invited to come along to bumps to babies but I don’t know whether we go into the detail around some of that brain development side of stuff and things like that. Maybe that is the thing that really would change things. You know, if you were given all of that information about what happens to a child as they grow, in a scientific way, as easy to understand as possible, could be the thing that impacted on behaviour in the home.

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Children's Charity

If your child’s with the mother, like your relationship with her depends on your relationship with the child, innit. That’s what I realised a lot, like you can try and be bitter, you can try and be this, be that, but it’s just gonna push you further away from your child, innit.

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Jackson, 21

I wanna fight for more stuff for dads. Like I do wanna have that extra support for new dads or even existing dads that we don’t get now 'cause we’re still important too although obviously the mum does need the majority a’ the care because obviously of the after care and the birth. But like the dads take it extremely hard as well. And obviously with having no support I think it increases the rise of mental health.

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Simon, 31
I became a father for the first time at 20. I am now a dad of 3.

I think both a mother and father combined, it’s communicating and both being on the same page of what’s best for your child or children, and for both, it’s just being there 100% for them and not, like, putting yourself first, it’s, you know, putting the child’s interests first...

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Jock, 33
I was 23 when I had my child

We need to be including, we need to not [just] be focusing on mum and child […] That’s a great focus but dad … dad’s not invisible, dad needs to be in the picture as well because there’s research that shows you the effect it has on children and families as a whole when dad isn’t in the picture, so services need to be changing the way in which they work so it’s more inclusive.

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Children and Families Support Organisation

Cause I think a lot of the time, some of young people who end up having children have been through the care system or support systems and they can feel quite judged or labelled by organisations and it’s breaking the cycle and breaking them out of that to feel empowered to be able to take stuff back, that’s the real interest to me. So, it’s about getting support right, as in being there and giving advice and guidance and all them things that we can do, but also making sure that we are doing with people as opposed to people.

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Children's Charity

One of the most successful projects we ever did was an informal dads’ group, and it used to be on Saturdays […] they did what they wanted, they used to do things like breakfast, and they would have breakfast together and talk about dad stuff and where they were taking their kids. And that group was always really well attended because there was never an agenda. They were never judged. They were just there together.

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Children and Families Support Organisation

...the whole stay at home dad thing is not something to be ashamed of, you know, if you’re a dad and you wanna take your daughter out for the day, or you wanna take your kid out for the day on your own, well why is that frowned upon, why can’t you take your child out for the day

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Toby, 26
I was 24 when I had my first child.

Oh…patience…compassion…tolerance, a whole boatload a’ that!  Honestly, I like a whole lot of life.  Sacrifice…compromise, yeah I think, yeah I think they, they would be the, the big, the five, I feel, I think that was five, they would be the main. 

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Ben, 31
I was 20 when I had my child

We’re currently in touch with social services for two [dads] because they don’t understand why they can’t see their children because they haven’t been informed by social services, their partner. So there’s a massive communication breakdown with those young men, so that’s the main focus of what we’re dealing with at the minute.

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Young Fathers' Support Organisation

it’s still…the…sense of judgement I get from other people when they find out that I have a child.And they say, ‘oh how old is she’.I say, ‘oh she’s ten’. And they say, ‘oh how old are you?’. Like you don’t need to know that....I know exactly where that thought process is going, you know. It’s like, ‘oh you look really young and you’ve had a kid’. It’s like, ‘yeah I know, I was there!’

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Ben, 31
I was 20 when I had my child

Partners

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