This article suggests that recent abuse reports and the Ryan Report in particular are now warning signs etched in the consciousness of social care workers. Quite rightly, this consciousness will determine how social care workers approach their work with children in the care system. In many care units the incessant, ostensibly plausible, demands of bureaucracy mean that children exist in an artificial, sanitised care bubble where they are bereft of structure, empathy, spontaneity and real relationships – the very things they crave. Written in a personal capacity and based on the author’s background practice experience, some of this article represents points of view rather than evidential conclusions. The article’s purpose is to contribute to...
This article suggests that social care in Ireland is at a crossroads and that the Irish Association ...
Reporting the findings from an English study of practitioners working within multi-agency settings, ...
Demand for children’s social care is often conflated with rates of intervention and associated with ...
The Ryan Report, published in 2009, was not the first review of child welfare services to raise disq...
Public inquiries into social care scandals have had a major public impact and have provoked demands ...
This paper examines the issue of social workers’ caseloads in child protection and welfare in the Re...
The Implementation Plan for the Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse (2009), better ...
It is still widely held that the traditional or conventional nuclear family is the only suitable env...
This article examines the perceptions of staff working in community-based children's homes. Data fro...
Abuse in residential childcare has been of concern to the public and the profession for a number of ...
The last year of the previous Millennium saw the publication of the latest government document on ma...
The article will offer an historical perspective on the origins of institutionalised care for childr...
Court proceedings are a fundamental and increasingly time-consuming aspect of social work practice. ...
Essay review of : Ward, A., Kasinski, K., Pooley, J. and Worthington, A. (eds) (2003). Therapeutic C...
Inquiries have played an important role in telling the stories of children abused and neglected in I...
This article suggests that social care in Ireland is at a crossroads and that the Irish Association ...
Reporting the findings from an English study of practitioners working within multi-agency settings, ...
Demand for children’s social care is often conflated with rates of intervention and associated with ...
The Ryan Report, published in 2009, was not the first review of child welfare services to raise disq...
Public inquiries into social care scandals have had a major public impact and have provoked demands ...
This paper examines the issue of social workers’ caseloads in child protection and welfare in the Re...
The Implementation Plan for the Report of the Commission to Inquire into Child Abuse (2009), better ...
It is still widely held that the traditional or conventional nuclear family is the only suitable env...
This article examines the perceptions of staff working in community-based children's homes. Data fro...
Abuse in residential childcare has been of concern to the public and the profession for a number of ...
The last year of the previous Millennium saw the publication of the latest government document on ma...
The article will offer an historical perspective on the origins of institutionalised care for childr...
Court proceedings are a fundamental and increasingly time-consuming aspect of social work practice. ...
Essay review of : Ward, A., Kasinski, K., Pooley, J. and Worthington, A. (eds) (2003). Therapeutic C...
Inquiries have played an important role in telling the stories of children abused and neglected in I...
This article suggests that social care in Ireland is at a crossroads and that the Irish Association ...
Reporting the findings from an English study of practitioners working within multi-agency settings, ...
Demand for children’s social care is often conflated with rates of intervention and associated with ...