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Child Protection Systems: International Trends and Orientations


Child Protection Systems: International Trends and Orientations

Hardback by Gilbert, Neil (Chernin Professor of Social Welfare, Chernin Professor of Social Welfare, University of California, Berkeley); Parton, Nigel (NSPCC Professor in Applied Childhood Studies, NSPCC Professor in Applied Childhood Studies, University of Huddersfield); Skivenes, Marit (Senior Researcher, Senior Researcher, Bergen University College)

Child Protection Systems: International Trends and Orientations

£82.00

ISBN:
9780199793358
Publication Date:
9 Jun 2011
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press Inc
Pages:
288 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 16 - 21 May 2024
Child Protection Systems: International Trends and Orientations

Description

Child Protection Systems is a comparative study of the social policies and professional practices that frame societal responses to the problems of child maltreatment in ten countries: USA, Canada, England, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany and Norway. Focusing on the developments in policy and practice since the mid-1990s, this volume provides a detailed, up-to-date analysis of the similarities and differences in how child protection systems operate and their outcomes. The findings highlight the changing criteria that define child maltreatment, trends in out-of-home placement, professional responses to allegations of maltreatment, and the level of state responsibility for child and family welfare, providing an in-depth understanding of the different ways modern welfare states assume the sensitive responsibility of balancing children's rights and parents' rights. The changing character of child protection systems worldwide reflects dramatic and rapid organizational, policy, and legislative changes; the expansion of child welfare systems; the rise of formal procedures and evidence-based initiatives; the increased challenges posed by race and ethnicity; and the extent to which countries adopt either a child protection or a family service approach to child abuse. Each chapter analyzes these developments and the directions in which they are heading, such as movements toward privatization and devolution of child welfare service delivery. Against this backdrop, a third approach begins to emerge-a child-focused orientation-that aims to promote and improve children's development and well-being. A vital book for understanding contemporary trends and policy issues in the design of child protection systems, this will be must reading for comparative scholars of child welfare, family policy, and the welfare state.

Contents

1. Introduction ; Neil Gilbert, Nigel Parton, and Marit Skivenes ; I. ANGLO-AMERICAN SYSTEMS ; 2. Trends and Issues in the U.S. Child Welfare System ; Jill Duerr Berrick ; 3. Canadian Child Welfare: Child Protection and the Status Quo ; Karen Swift ; 4. Child Protection in England ; Nigel Parton and David Berridge ; II. NORDIC SYSTEMS ; 5. The Dark Side of the Universal Welfare State? Child Abuse and Protection in Sweden ; Madeleine Cocozza and Sven E. O. Hort ; 6. Combatting Child Abuse in Finland: From Family to Child-Centered Orientation ; Tarja Poso ; 7. Denmark: A Child Welfare System Under Reframing ; Anne-Dorthe Hestbaek ; 8. Norway: Towards a Child-Centric Perspective ; Marit Skivenes ; III. CONTINENTAL SYSTEMS ; 9. Child Protection in an Age of Uncertainty: Germany's Response ; Reinhart Wolff, Kay Biesel, and Stefan Heinitz ; 10. Policy Towards Child Abuse and Neglect in Belgium: In Search of a Democratic Approach ; Kristof Desair and Peter Adriaenssens ; 11. Child Welfare in the Netherlands: Between Privacy and Protection Trudie Knijn and Carolus van Nijnatten ; IV. CONCLUSION ; 12. Changing Patterns of Response and Emerging Orientations Neil Gilbert, Nigel Parton, and Marit Skivenes

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