Change and continuity in children's services

Author(s)

    • Parker, Roy

Bibliographic Information

Change and continuity in children's services

Roy Parker

Policy Press, 2015

  • : hardcover

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 197-210) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This collection of 12 new and revised essays on child care and children's services, written by leading child welfare historian Roy Parker, draws on his lifetime of research in this area. By exploring various topics these essays explain significant political, economic, legal and ideological aspects of this history from the mid-1850s. This unique and lasting review of child care services allows readers to understand how the services for some of society's most vulnerable children have become what they are, how well they have met and now meet the needs of those children. The collection provides a high-quality, historical reference resource that will inform and capture the interest of social work and social policy students as well as social and legal historians, political scientists and those involved in administration and government, struggling with the issues of the day.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: Patterns of change and continuity
  • Residential child care: an historical perspective
  • From boarding-out to foster care
  • The evolution of landmark legislation
  • Getting started with the Children Act 1948: what do we learn?
  • Child care in the melting pot in the 1980s
  • Trends, transitions and tensions: children's services since the 1980s
  • Reflections on the assessment of outcomes in child care
  • The role and function of inquiries
  • Evidence, values, judgement and engagement
  • Emerging issues: looking ahead.

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