Re imagining Child Protection

Re imagining Child Protection
Author: Featherstone, Brid,Kate Morris,White, Susan
Publsiher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2014-04-14
Genre: POLITICAL SCIENCE
ISBN: 9781447308010

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This book challenges the current child protection culture and calls for family-minded humane practice where children are understood as relational beings, parents are recognized as people with needs and hopes and families as carrying extraordinary capacities for care and protection.

Protecting children

Protecting children
Author: Featherstone, Brid,Gupta, Anna
Publsiher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2018-09-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781447332763

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The state is increasingly experienced as both intrusive and neglectful, particularly by those living in poverty, leading to loss of trust and widespread feelings of alienation and disconnection. Against this tense background, this innovative book argues that child protection policies and practices have become part of the problem, rather than ensuring children’s well-being and safety. Building on the ideas in the best-selling Re-imagining child protection and drawing together a wide range of social theorists and disciplines, the book: • Challenges existing notions of child protection, revealing their limits; • Ensures that the harms children and families experience are explored in a way that acknowledges the social and economic contexts in which they live; • Explains how the protective capacities within families and communities can be mobilised and practices of co-production adopted; • Places ethics and human rights at the centre of everyday conversations and practices.

Mothering on the Edge

Mothering on the Edge
Author: Brooke Richardson
Publsiher: Demeter Press
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2022-08-13
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781772584110

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This book brings critical, scholarly attention to the systematic positioning and subjective experiences of mothers involved in child protection processes in “ risk” -based child protection systems (Parton, Thorpe and Wattam; Connolley; Swift and Callahan). While mothers are typically the primary focus of child protection prevention and investigations (Azzopardi et al.; Fallon et al.; Swift and Callahan), their gendered experiences, challenges and triumphs are seldom given space in the academic literature, practice and/or public spaces to be seen or heard. Chapters in this volume build on existing literature to illustrate the structural positioning and/or lived experiences of mothers who come into contact with child protection for a variety of reasons: substance (ab)use, positive HIV status, child injury, fetal alcohol syndrome, colonial assessment methodologies, young age, incarceration, childbirth, and intimate partner violence. This book offers three unique contributions to existing literature on mothering in child protection. First, it creates space for mothers involved in child protection to have their voices heard. Second, it acknowledges the centrality of mothers' subjective experience in keeping children safe. Finally, it challenges dominant, often dehumanizing narratives of mothers in involved in child protection through providing a more nuanced understanding of their lives. Ultimately this anthology calls for a fundamental rethinking of how mothers involved in child protection proceedings are conceptualized in child protection research, policy and practice. It is recommended that mothers voices must be central to humanely reforming child protection systems.

A Political History of Child Protection

A Political History of Child Protection
Author: Ian Kelvin Hyslop
Publsiher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 214
Release: 2022-01-26
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781447353188

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Exploring the current and historical tensions between liberal capitalism and indigenous models of family life, Ian Kelvin Hyslop argues for a new model of child protection in Aotearoa New Zealand and other parts of the Anglophone world. He puts forward the case that child safety can only be sustainably advanced by policy initiatives which promote social and economic equality and from practice which takes meaningful account of the complex relationship between economic circumstances and the lived realities of service users.

Reassessing Attachment Theory in Child Welfare

Reassessing Attachment Theory in Child Welfare
Author: Walsh, Trish,White, Sue
Publsiher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 176
Release: 2019-12-04
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781447336914

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This book offers an analysis and summery of the use and limitations of child attachment theory as the basis for decision-making and planning in contemporary child welfare practice. This book explores controversies related to increasing diagnoses of ‘attachment disorder’ in child welfare assessments and arguments both for and against the use of attachment specific therapies for children in care. The author calls for a new pedagogy of relational child welfare and considers the relevance of attachment theory to transnational and migrant families, refugees fleeing conflict, adoptive and surrogate children in diverse families and the increased number of families that are in poverty after the global financial crisis.

Mental health social work re imagined

Mental health social work re imagined
Author: Cummins, Ian
Publsiher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2019-04-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781447335597

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Taking a critical and radical approach, this book calls for a return to mental health social work that has personal relationships and an emotional connection between workers and those experiencing distress at its core. The optimism that underpinned the development of community care policies has dissipated to be replaced by a form of bleak managerialism. Neoliberalism has added stress to services already under great pressure and created a danger that we could revert to institutional forms of care. This much-needed book argues that the original progressive values of community care policies need to be rediscovered, updated and reinvigorated to provide a basis for a mental health social work that returns to fundamental notions of dignity and citizenship.

Seeing the Child in Child Protection Social Work

Seeing the Child in Child Protection Social Work
Author: Sue Kennedy
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2019-12-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781350314146

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Recent Serious Case Reviews into child deaths have concluded that social workers attention is drawn away from the child by demands placed on them by the adults, organisational structures and systems. This book repositions social work thinking and practice by placing the child's lived experience at the centre of its illustrative examples and cases.

Child Protection

Child Protection
Author: Kim Holt
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 174
Release: 2019-05-14
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781352006353

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How do you apply the principles, structures and processes of the law to everyday practice? Drawing on a wealth of contemporary case examples, this handy pocket book demystifies the legislation on child protection and demonstrates the practical duties and responsibilities of professionals working within this complex area. Students taking Social Work qualifying undergraduate and postgraduate degrees. Qualifies Social Workers fulfilling their learning development requirements. Students taking non-social work but related degrees, e.g. Community and Youth Work. 2nd / 3rd level students on qualifying Social Work courses (u/g and p/g).