In this article, we consider different perspectives on who is best able to provide relevant and helpful expertise in public law cases where the long-term care of children is under consideration. Opinions vary and sometimes conflict on the respective importance of legal, child development, and lay understandings. These opinions relate to views on rights, appropriate procedures, decision-making processes, and the effects of decisions on children. Firstly, we summarise literature relevant to the knowledge and skills of three key groups of decision-makers within the Scottish child care system: legal professionals, child care professionals and lay decision-makers, and outline literature about guardiansad litemand their counterparts. We then disc...
The CRC is an ethical foundation documents to strengthen children's position in the family law proce...
Court proceedings are a fundamental and increasingly time-consuming aspect of social work practice. ...
The master thesis you are reading now is a qualitative research on meaning-making of experts in chil...
In this article, we consider different perspectives on who is best able to provide relevant and help...
This paper presents the views of judicial decision-makers (n= 1794) in four child protection jurisdi...
Every year thousands of children in Scotland become looked after either at home or away from home. M...
This international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child outlines the rights of childr...
This chapter examines interdisciplinary communication and evaluation of professional expertise, with...
Child custody evaluations (CCEs) are a central feature of parenting litigation in many North America...
This paper examines the discretionary reasoning of the judiciary in three jurisdictions, England, Ge...
Professionals working in child welfare and child protection are making decisions with crucial implic...
This paper considers the issue of ‘practicability’ in ascertaining the views of children in family p...
Our knowledge of decision making in child welfare has evolved concurrent with the recognition that t...
The CRC is an ethical foundation documents to strengthen children's position in the family law proce...
Court proceedings are a fundamental and increasingly time-consuming aspect of social work practice. ...
The master thesis you are reading now is a qualitative research on meaning-making of experts in chil...
In this article, we consider different perspectives on who is best able to provide relevant and help...
This paper presents the views of judicial decision-makers (n= 1794) in four child protection jurisdi...
Every year thousands of children in Scotland become looked after either at home or away from home. M...
This international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
Article 12 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child outlines the rights of childr...
This chapter examines interdisciplinary communication and evaluation of professional expertise, with...
Child custody evaluations (CCEs) are a central feature of parenting litigation in many North America...
This paper examines the discretionary reasoning of the judiciary in three jurisdictions, England, Ge...
Professionals working in child welfare and child protection are making decisions with crucial implic...
This paper considers the issue of ‘practicability’ in ascertaining the views of children in family p...
Our knowledge of decision making in child welfare has evolved concurrent with the recognition that t...
The CRC is an ethical foundation documents to strengthen children's position in the family law proce...
Court proceedings are a fundamental and increasingly time-consuming aspect of social work practice. ...
The master thesis you are reading now is a qualitative research on meaning-making of experts in chil...