Sara Ryan’s Justice for Laughing Boy is a deeply touching and personal account of the life and untimely death of Connor Sparrowhawk, who drowned in a bath while in the care of an NHS learning disability specific support unit, Slade House. Ryan, a social scientist and mother of Connor, offers readers an intimate perspective on her relationship with Connor throughout his life and her frustrations of trying to ensure that Connor had support appropriately tailored to his individual needs. Ryan highlights through Connor’s experiences at Slade House and the subsequent ‘Justice for Laughing Boy’ campaign that an important imbalance exists in health and social care delivery between individuals with and without additional needs in the UK
Leading good care: the task, heart and art of managing social care (2015) by John Burton is an inter...
For some reason, the songstress, theme park owner and extraordinary wig wearer Dolly Parton is rarel...
Suki Ferguson reviews Derek Bok‘s in-depth work on happiness and public policy, believing that David...
Sara Ryan’s Justice for Laughing Boy is a deeply touching and personal account of the life and untim...
This book review is structured around a set of questions which have been devised specifically to enc...
This text, Caught in the Web of the Criminal Justice System, represents a crucial exploration into t...
We do not think enough about what we do or the context of our encounters and interactions with youth...
The three authors, leading researchers and writers in this field, describe this book as an 'evidence...
The Panopticon by Edinburgh poet and writer Jenni Fagan is not for the faint hearted. It is a novel ...
For young people in care the pathway through education can be littered with obstacles. Traumatic exp...
The books reviewed in this article are: Barton, S., Gonzalez, R., & Tomlinson, P. (2012). Therapeuti...
I have to admit that I approached this review with some prejudices. When working at the University o...
Many years ago I read, and tried to absorb, the thinking and approaches in The Other 23 Hours, which...
Reviewed by Prof. N Martin, London South Bank University Title: Supporting Change in Autism Service...
When Mark Smith's Rethinking Residential Child Care came out, I was keen to ask Pat Petrie, Professo...
Leading good care: the task, heart and art of managing social care (2015) by John Burton is an inter...
For some reason, the songstress, theme park owner and extraordinary wig wearer Dolly Parton is rarel...
Suki Ferguson reviews Derek Bok‘s in-depth work on happiness and public policy, believing that David...
Sara Ryan’s Justice for Laughing Boy is a deeply touching and personal account of the life and untim...
This book review is structured around a set of questions which have been devised specifically to enc...
This text, Caught in the Web of the Criminal Justice System, represents a crucial exploration into t...
We do not think enough about what we do or the context of our encounters and interactions with youth...
The three authors, leading researchers and writers in this field, describe this book as an 'evidence...
The Panopticon by Edinburgh poet and writer Jenni Fagan is not for the faint hearted. It is a novel ...
For young people in care the pathway through education can be littered with obstacles. Traumatic exp...
The books reviewed in this article are: Barton, S., Gonzalez, R., & Tomlinson, P. (2012). Therapeuti...
I have to admit that I approached this review with some prejudices. When working at the University o...
Many years ago I read, and tried to absorb, the thinking and approaches in The Other 23 Hours, which...
Reviewed by Prof. N Martin, London South Bank University Title: Supporting Change in Autism Service...
When Mark Smith's Rethinking Residential Child Care came out, I was keen to ask Pat Petrie, Professo...
Leading good care: the task, heart and art of managing social care (2015) by John Burton is an inter...
For some reason, the songstress, theme park owner and extraordinary wig wearer Dolly Parton is rarel...
Suki Ferguson reviews Derek Bok‘s in-depth work on happiness and public policy, believing that David...