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Re-imagining Child Protection: Towards Humane Social Work with Families


Re-imagining Child Protection: Towards Humane Social Work with Families

Paperback by Featherstone, Brid (Brid Featherstone is Professor of Social Work at the University of Huddersfield.); White, Susan (University of Sheffield); Morris, Kate (University of Sheffield)

Re-imagining Child Protection: Towards Humane Social Work with Families

£26.99

ISBN:
9781447308010
Publication Date:
14 Apr 2014
Language:
English
Publisher:
Bristol University Press
Imprint:
Policy Press
Pages:
192 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 6 - 7 May 2024
Re-imagining Child Protection: Towards Humane Social Work with Families

Description

Why has the language of the child and of child protection become so hegemonic? What is lost and gained by such language? Who is being protected, and from what, in a risk society? Given that the focus is overwhelmingly on those families who are multiply deprived, do services reinforce or ameliorate such deprivations? And is it ethical to remove children from their parents in a society riven by inequalities? This timely book challenges a child protection culture that has become mired in muscular authoritarianism towards multiply deprived families. It 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. The authors, who have over three decades of experience as social workers, managers, educators and researchers in England, also identify the key ingredients of just organizational cultures where learning is celebrated. This important book will be required reading for students on qualifying and post-qualifying courses in child protection, social workers, managers, academics and policy makers.

Contents

Introduction; Re-imagining child protection in the context of re-imagining welfare; We need to talk about ethics; Developing research mindedness in learning cultures; Towards a Just Culture: Designing Humane Social Work Organisations; Getting on and getting by: living with poverty; Thinking afresh about relationships: Men, women, parents and services; Tainted love: how dangerous families became troubled; Conclusion; References.

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