Social Work, Parents and the Child Protection Process
portes grátis
Social Work, Parents and the Child Protection Process
Representations of Parents in Policy, Organisation and Social Work Practice
Harris, John; Bain, Katrin
Bristol University Press
10/2024
208
Dura
9781447370635
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
1 Introduction
Terminology
Structure of the book
2 Parent- citizenship
Parental participation in Children's Services
Level 1: Non- participation presented as engaging parents
Level 2: Tokenism
Level 3: Voice
Level 4: Citizen power
Power
Representations of parent- citizens
Conclusion
3 Risk, reform, regulation and relationships in child protection
Risk and reform
New risks
A regulated profession
Relationships
Conclusion
4 The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent and the poor- neglectful parent
The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent
The poor- neglectful parent
Conclusion
5 The franchisee parent
Family, parenthood and child- centred social work practice
Parental risk factors, concerning adult behaviour - effecting sustainable change
Engaging the franchisee parent
Variations of the franchisee parent
Conclusion
6 The partner parent and the respected parent
The partner parent
Family Group Conferences
The respected parent
Signs of Safety
Conclusion
7 The non- compliant parent
Non- compliance
Disguised compliance
Responses to the non- compliant parent
Troubled Families
Conclusion
8 The personalised- depersonalised parent
'Mum' and 'dad' in the original study
'Mum' and 'dad' in the replication study
Conclusion
9 The good enough parent
Good enough
Good enough in multi- agency working
More transparency?
Good enough parent
Conclusion
10 The 'parent- citizen' in policy, organisation and practice
Parent- citizenship within Children's Services
Cross- level connections
Citizenship
Repositioning parents in Children's Services
Conclusion
Appendix A: Documents used in analysis
Appendix B: The research design and process
Terminology
Structure of the book
2 Parent- citizenship
Parental participation in Children's Services
Level 1: Non- participation presented as engaging parents
Level 2: Tokenism
Level 3: Voice
Level 4: Citizen power
Power
Representations of parent- citizens
Conclusion
3 Risk, reform, regulation and relationships in child protection
Risk and reform
New risks
A regulated profession
Relationships
Conclusion
4 The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent and the poor- neglectful parent
The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent
The poor- neglectful parent
Conclusion
5 The franchisee parent
Family, parenthood and child- centred social work practice
Parental risk factors, concerning adult behaviour - effecting sustainable change
Engaging the franchisee parent
Variations of the franchisee parent
Conclusion
6 The partner parent and the respected parent
The partner parent
Family Group Conferences
The respected parent
Signs of Safety
Conclusion
7 The non- compliant parent
Non- compliance
Disguised compliance
Responses to the non- compliant parent
Troubled Families
Conclusion
8 The personalised- depersonalised parent
'Mum' and 'dad' in the original study
'Mum' and 'dad' in the replication study
Conclusion
9 The good enough parent
Good enough
Good enough in multi- agency working
More transparency?
Good enough parent
Conclusion
10 The 'parent- citizen' in policy, organisation and practice
Parent- citizenship within Children's Services
Cross- level connections
Citizenship
Repositioning parents in Children's Services
Conclusion
Appendix A: Documents used in analysis
Appendix B: The research design and process
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Children's Services; Social Work; Parents; Citizenship; Policy Reform; Sociology; State; Family
1 Introduction
Terminology
Structure of the book
2 Parent- citizenship
Parental participation in Children's Services
Level 1: Non- participation presented as engaging parents
Level 2: Tokenism
Level 3: Voice
Level 4: Citizen power
Power
Representations of parent- citizens
Conclusion
3 Risk, reform, regulation and relationships in child protection
Risk and reform
New risks
A regulated profession
Relationships
Conclusion
4 The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent and the poor- neglectful parent
The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent
The poor- neglectful parent
Conclusion
5 The franchisee parent
Family, parenthood and child- centred social work practice
Parental risk factors, concerning adult behaviour - effecting sustainable change
Engaging the franchisee parent
Variations of the franchisee parent
Conclusion
6 The partner parent and the respected parent
The partner parent
Family Group Conferences
The respected parent
Signs of Safety
Conclusion
7 The non- compliant parent
Non- compliance
Disguised compliance
Responses to the non- compliant parent
Troubled Families
Conclusion
8 The personalised- depersonalised parent
'Mum' and 'dad' in the original study
'Mum' and 'dad' in the replication study
Conclusion
9 The good enough parent
Good enough
Good enough in multi- agency working
More transparency?
Good enough parent
Conclusion
10 The 'parent- citizen' in policy, organisation and practice
Parent- citizenship within Children's Services
Cross- level connections
Citizenship
Repositioning parents in Children's Services
Conclusion
Appendix A: Documents used in analysis
Appendix B: The research design and process
Terminology
Structure of the book
2 Parent- citizenship
Parental participation in Children's Services
Level 1: Non- participation presented as engaging parents
Level 2: Tokenism
Level 3: Voice
Level 4: Citizen power
Power
Representations of parent- citizens
Conclusion
3 Risk, reform, regulation and relationships in child protection
Risk and reform
New risks
A regulated profession
Relationships
Conclusion
4 The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent and the poor- neglectful parent
The demanding- responsible consumer- citizen parent
The poor- neglectful parent
Conclusion
5 The franchisee parent
Family, parenthood and child- centred social work practice
Parental risk factors, concerning adult behaviour - effecting sustainable change
Engaging the franchisee parent
Variations of the franchisee parent
Conclusion
6 The partner parent and the respected parent
The partner parent
Family Group Conferences
The respected parent
Signs of Safety
Conclusion
7 The non- compliant parent
Non- compliance
Disguised compliance
Responses to the non- compliant parent
Troubled Families
Conclusion
8 The personalised- depersonalised parent
'Mum' and 'dad' in the original study
'Mum' and 'dad' in the replication study
Conclusion
9 The good enough parent
Good enough
Good enough in multi- agency working
More transparency?
Good enough parent
Conclusion
10 The 'parent- citizen' in policy, organisation and practice
Parent- citizenship within Children's Services
Cross- level connections
Citizenship
Repositioning parents in Children's Services
Conclusion
Appendix A: Documents used in analysis
Appendix B: The research design and process
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.