This paper examines whether and how the views of professional decision makers in public agencies and courts in four child protection jurisdictions align with the views of the public. Democratic states are built on the foundation that state polices are accountable to, and represent, the citizens’ will. The extent to which this is the case in child protection is largely unknown. This study draws on survey vignette data collected from three samples (citizens, child protection staff and judiciary decision makers) representing society at large, the child welfare agency, and judicial systems in four jurisdictions - England, Finland, Norway, and the U.S. (California). Findings from this study suggest that there is a high degree of similarity acros...
Child friendly justice and access to justice for children are explicit concerns for the European Uni...
Item does not contain fulltextChild welfare professionals regularly make crucial decisions that have...
Decisions about child protection and interventions in families are one of the most difficult respons...
This paper examines whether and how the views of professional decision makers in public agencies and...
This paper presents the views of judicial decision-makers (n = 1794) in four child protect...
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 international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
In this study, we examine the trust placed by the populations of nine jurisdictions in their child p...
This paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
This paper examines populous perspectives of the government’s responsibility to intervene in situati...
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 paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
Child friendly justice and access to justice for children are explicit concerns for the European Uni...
Item does not contain fulltextChild welfare professionals regularly make crucial decisions that have...
Decisions about child protection and interventions in families are one of the most difficult respons...
This paper examines whether and how the views of professional decision makers in public agencies and...
This paper presents the views of judicial decision-makers (n = 1794) in four child protect...
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 international comparative paper examines how child protection workers in four countries, Englan...
In this study, we examine the trust placed by the populations of nine jurisdictions in their child p...
This paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
This paper examines populous perspectives of the government’s responsibility to intervene in situati...
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 paper compares how frontline staff in four national child welfare systems and policy contexts –...
Child friendly justice and access to justice for children are explicit concerns for the European Uni...
Item does not contain fulltextChild welfare professionals regularly make crucial decisions that have...
Decisions about child protection and interventions in families are one of the most difficult respons...