This article compares blank care order application templates used in four countries (England, Finland, Norway, and USA (California)), treating them as a vital part of the ‘institutional scripts’ that shape practice, and embody state principles of child protection. The templates are used when child protection agencies apply to court for a care order, usually to remove a child from the family home. The templates prescribe and shape the type of information and analysis that is required justify such an extreme level of state intervention in family life. They are a mechanism and a manifestation of the principles and the legislation of each child welfare system, and are able to cast light on issues that might otherwise remain unseen or unnoticed ...
This article examines what social workers do when preparing the removal of a child into public care ...
This paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
When a child for some reason can’t live with their parents it is up to the welfare system to provide...
This article compares blank care order application templates used in four countries (England, Finlan...
Care orders within the child protection system are some of the most invasive interventions a state c...
Care orders within the child protection system are some of the most invasive interventions a state c...
This article examines parents' involvement in care order decision-making in four countries at one pa...
This international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
This international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
This paper draws on an international comparative study of social work decision making in cases that ...
This paper draws on an international comparative study of social work decision-making in cases that ...
This paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
This paper presents the views of judicial decision-makers (n = 1794) in four child protect...
This paper examines whether and how the views of professional decision makers in public agencies and...
This dissertation is a case study of how two agencies in Umeå, Sweden and Barrie, Canada protect chi...
This article examines what social workers do when preparing the removal of a child into public care ...
This paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
When a child for some reason can’t live with their parents it is up to the welfare system to provide...
This article compares blank care order application templates used in four countries (England, Finlan...
Care orders within the child protection system are some of the most invasive interventions a state c...
Care orders within the child protection system are some of the most invasive interventions a state c...
This article examines parents' involvement in care order decision-making in four countries at one pa...
This international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
This international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
This paper draws on an international comparative study of social work decision making in cases that ...
This paper draws on an international comparative study of social work decision-making in cases that ...
This paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
This paper presents the views of judicial decision-makers (n = 1794) in four child protect...
This paper examines whether and how the views of professional decision makers in public agencies and...
This dissertation is a case study of how two agencies in Umeå, Sweden and Barrie, Canada protect chi...
This article examines what social workers do when preparing the removal of a child into public care ...
This paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
When a child for some reason can’t live with their parents it is up to the welfare system to provide...