The article addresses some recent attempts to reassess the contemporary child protection system as potentially liberating. These are, first, discussions of child protection in the context of theories of reflexive modernization and the risk society, and, second, postmodernist feminist writings. After initial theoretical debate about some of these perspectives, the authors go on to present ethnographic research evidence showing that social control is alive and well in child protection work. The article concludes that, while these recent optimistic accounts of the child protection system are welcome contributions, they have overstated the liberating potentials of the current system. While much of the discussion deals with child prote...
This paper describes a paradigmatic shift in child protection practice within the UK, arguing that t...
This thesis examines the development of the Irish child protection system up until the present day. ...
In this article, we argue for a new approach to child welfare—one that replaces existing child prote...
The article addresses some recent attempts to reassess the contemporary child protection system as ...
The paper addresses some recent attempts to reassess the child protection system as potentially libe...
This paper examines the nature of late-modern child protection by placing it in the context of the p...
This article offers a rethinking of protection based on a synthesised data from Finland and Sweden o...
The question of how to protect children from non-accidental harm has dominated child welfare discour...
The question of how to protect children from non-accidental harm has dominated child welfare discour...
This article considers the challenges and opportunities facing contemporary child protection practic...
This article offers a rethinking of protection based on synthesised data from Finland and Sweden on ...
This article explores how the child protection system currently operates in England. It analyses how...
This article explores how the child protection system currently operates in England. It analyses how...
This article provides a response to the critique by Braithwaite et al. (this issue) of current appro...
Many countries are struggling to reconcile the conflicting demands of heightened risk aversion culti...
This paper describes a paradigmatic shift in child protection practice within the UK, arguing that t...
This thesis examines the development of the Irish child protection system up until the present day. ...
In this article, we argue for a new approach to child welfare—one that replaces existing child prote...
The article addresses some recent attempts to reassess the contemporary child protection system as ...
The paper addresses some recent attempts to reassess the child protection system as potentially libe...
This paper examines the nature of late-modern child protection by placing it in the context of the p...
This article offers a rethinking of protection based on a synthesised data from Finland and Sweden o...
The question of how to protect children from non-accidental harm has dominated child welfare discour...
The question of how to protect children from non-accidental harm has dominated child welfare discour...
This article considers the challenges and opportunities facing contemporary child protection practic...
This article offers a rethinking of protection based on synthesised data from Finland and Sweden on ...
This article explores how the child protection system currently operates in England. It analyses how...
This article explores how the child protection system currently operates in England. It analyses how...
This article provides a response to the critique by Braithwaite et al. (this issue) of current appro...
Many countries are struggling to reconcile the conflicting demands of heightened risk aversion culti...
This paper describes a paradigmatic shift in child protection practice within the UK, arguing that t...
This thesis examines the development of the Irish child protection system up until the present day. ...
In this article, we argue for a new approach to child welfare—one that replaces existing child prote...