Drawing on data from a Scottish research study, this paper explores the relationship of professionals’ perceptions about specific perpetrators and victims to their constructions of ‘adult protection’ issues in practice. It finds that professionals’ perceptions of victim distress did not consistently coincide with the construction of adult protection issues, whilst the connection to any assessment of victims’ heightened vulnerability in specific cases was not clear. With respect to perpetrators, implicit practice rules were evidenced which differed from explicit policy criteria. In particular, there were different rules for relatives, staff and service user perpetrators, whilst harms attributed to institutions w...
Purpose: The article outlines the duties and powers of the Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) A...
Purpose – The Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) Act 2007 places a duty on Councils to investig...
Purpose -This study explores the similarities and differences of legal responses to older adults who...
Drawing on data from a Scottish research study, this paper explores the relationship of professional...
This paper critically reflects on the Scottish Adult Support and Protection study (the ASP study), a...
This PhD project by publication begins to explore how Scottish adult support and protection (ASP) po...
This paper outlines two models for understanding the roots of adult safeguarding/adult support and p...
This paper places Scottish adult support and protection (ASP) policy in the context of debates about...
Purpose - This article seeks to explore the difference that adult support and protection legislation...
The main areas considered within this qualitative study are the extent to which the Adult Support an...
This paper critically reflects on the Scottish Adult Support and Protection study (the ASP study), a...
SUMMARY: This paper offers Scottish adult safeguarding as a case study to illuminate some challenges...
Summary Greater priority is now being given to improving responses to concerns that adults may be a...
First paragraph: Adult safeguarding policy is an acknowledgment by governments that they have respo...
Policies and procedures for 'adult safeguarding' aim to protect adults against the harm posed to the...
Purpose: The article outlines the duties and powers of the Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) A...
Purpose – The Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) Act 2007 places a duty on Councils to investig...
Purpose -This study explores the similarities and differences of legal responses to older adults who...
Drawing on data from a Scottish research study, this paper explores the relationship of professional...
This paper critically reflects on the Scottish Adult Support and Protection study (the ASP study), a...
This PhD project by publication begins to explore how Scottish adult support and protection (ASP) po...
This paper outlines two models for understanding the roots of adult safeguarding/adult support and p...
This paper places Scottish adult support and protection (ASP) policy in the context of debates about...
Purpose - This article seeks to explore the difference that adult support and protection legislation...
The main areas considered within this qualitative study are the extent to which the Adult Support an...
This paper critically reflects on the Scottish Adult Support and Protection study (the ASP study), a...
SUMMARY: This paper offers Scottish adult safeguarding as a case study to illuminate some challenges...
Summary Greater priority is now being given to improving responses to concerns that adults may be a...
First paragraph: Adult safeguarding policy is an acknowledgment by governments that they have respo...
Policies and procedures for 'adult safeguarding' aim to protect adults against the harm posed to the...
Purpose: The article outlines the duties and powers of the Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) A...
Purpose – The Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) Act 2007 places a duty on Councils to investig...
Purpose -This study explores the similarities and differences of legal responses to older adults who...