This article explores the experiences of families within the Troubled Families Programme in responding to professional concerns about the condition and maintenance of the family home. Drawing upon care ethicists’ development of relational autonomy perspectives, neoliberal assumptions about personal agency and responsibility are challenged, and the complexity of the constraints upon families highlighted. Within this framework, family interventions can be repositioned, not as an intrusive form of domestic surveillance levied at working class women, but as an opportunity to support families (and especially mothers) to overcome oppressive conditions which constrain their capacity to act
Abstract: Ideas about maintaining the ‘solidarity of the family’, in contrast to women’s interests, ...
This paper engages with ongoing debates about care ethics in order to evaluate current policy and pr...
Summary Domestic and family violence remains a significant challenge to family wellbeing. The risk o...
The Troubled Families Programme (TFP) in England and Wales was launched in 2011 in the wake of the s...
Abstract: An increased focus on ‘family’ has developed as part of the social investment state in man...
The discourse around families perceived to have complex needs has developed at a policy level, very ...
2 Abstract Despite consistent political, academic and media interest in ‘troublesome’ families and a...
The discourse around families perceived to have complex needs has developed at a policy level, very ...
The commitment of the appointed Director General of the Troubled Families Unit, Louise Casey, that t...
Through a sociological case study this article analyses how, seen from a relational perspective, eve...
Children’s health is a key factor in women’s decisions to leave abusive partners, yet how these fami...
Drawing upon the Trace method developed by Selma Sevenhuijsen (2004), this paper has traced the disc...
In seeking to make sense of the role of intensive family support in the governance of anti-social be...
Based on audio diaries and narrative interviews with family carers, this paper suggests care can be ...
An increased focus on ‘family’ has developed as part of the social investment state in many countrie...
Abstract: Ideas about maintaining the ‘solidarity of the family’, in contrast to women’s interests, ...
This paper engages with ongoing debates about care ethics in order to evaluate current policy and pr...
Summary Domestic and family violence remains a significant challenge to family wellbeing. The risk o...
The Troubled Families Programme (TFP) in England and Wales was launched in 2011 in the wake of the s...
Abstract: An increased focus on ‘family’ has developed as part of the social investment state in man...
The discourse around families perceived to have complex needs has developed at a policy level, very ...
2 Abstract Despite consistent political, academic and media interest in ‘troublesome’ families and a...
The discourse around families perceived to have complex needs has developed at a policy level, very ...
The commitment of the appointed Director General of the Troubled Families Unit, Louise Casey, that t...
Through a sociological case study this article analyses how, seen from a relational perspective, eve...
Children’s health is a key factor in women’s decisions to leave abusive partners, yet how these fami...
Drawing upon the Trace method developed by Selma Sevenhuijsen (2004), this paper has traced the disc...
In seeking to make sense of the role of intensive family support in the governance of anti-social be...
Based on audio diaries and narrative interviews with family carers, this paper suggests care can be ...
An increased focus on ‘family’ has developed as part of the social investment state in many countrie...
Abstract: Ideas about maintaining the ‘solidarity of the family’, in contrast to women’s interests, ...
This paper engages with ongoing debates about care ethics in order to evaluate current policy and pr...
Summary Domestic and family violence remains a significant challenge to family wellbeing. The risk o...