If, as many would have it, the ‘drugs problem’ is among the more perilous and uncompromising challenges of our times, parental substance misuse represents one of its most insidious expressions. The past 15 years has seen the ‘hidden harms’ experienced by the children of drug users emerge as a principal concern for national policy actors and local service provision. However, there has been relatively little critique of the assumptions and epistemological foundations underscoring this policy shift, or of the preoccupation with the ‘family’ in drug policy in general. Through examination of seminal policy documents relating to parental substance misuse, and using Carol Bacchi’s ‘What’s the Problem Represented to Be?’ (WPR) approach, this articl...
Children are critical to debates about drug law reform. For both advocates of liberalisation and, es...
[From the introduction]:Research aims and objectivesThis thesis aims to discover what sorts of tensi...
Images of children are routinely used in discourses on drugs, offering a compelling rationale for ad...
In 2003, the UK Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs published Hidden Harm, the product of an inq...
This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund - Copyright @ 2011 Har...
There are estimated to be 250 000–350 000 children of problem drug users in the UK. The Government's...
This briefing was based on findings from a two year longitudinal qualitative study funded by the NHS...
This new report focuses on the needs of children whose parents are problematic substance misusers. I...
Parental drug and alcohol problems can have a profound impact on children. There is a growing policy...
This conference originated from the findings of a literature review carried out by Dr. Justine Horga...
Research conducted over the past twenty years has demonstrated the impact of parental ‘problem’ subs...
This paper provides an overview of the research literature on the outcomes of children raised in fam...
Children living with parents who misuse substances are a group of children who are overlooked in po...
Incorporating analysis of data collected from a small sample of interviews within drug-treatment set...
This Article considers the varying reasons why drug policies informing child welfare interventions a...
Children are critical to debates about drug law reform. For both advocates of liberalisation and, es...
[From the introduction]:Research aims and objectivesThis thesis aims to discover what sorts of tensi...
Images of children are routinely used in discourses on drugs, offering a compelling rationale for ad...
In 2003, the UK Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs published Hidden Harm, the product of an inq...
This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund - Copyright @ 2011 Har...
There are estimated to be 250 000–350 000 children of problem drug users in the UK. The Government's...
This briefing was based on findings from a two year longitudinal qualitative study funded by the NHS...
This new report focuses on the needs of children whose parents are problematic substance misusers. I...
Parental drug and alcohol problems can have a profound impact on children. There is a growing policy...
This conference originated from the findings of a literature review carried out by Dr. Justine Horga...
Research conducted over the past twenty years has demonstrated the impact of parental ‘problem’ subs...
This paper provides an overview of the research literature on the outcomes of children raised in fam...
Children living with parents who misuse substances are a group of children who are overlooked in po...
Incorporating analysis of data collected from a small sample of interviews within drug-treatment set...
This Article considers the varying reasons why drug policies informing child welfare interventions a...
Children are critical to debates about drug law reform. For both advocates of liberalisation and, es...
[From the introduction]:Research aims and objectivesThis thesis aims to discover what sorts of tensi...
Images of children are routinely used in discourses on drugs, offering a compelling rationale for ad...