Cherishing all the children equally? brings together contributions from a range of disciplines to shed light on the processes of child development and to investigate how that development is influenced by a variety of demographic, family and socio-economic factors. Making extensive use of research and data that have emerged over recent years from the Growing Up in Ireland longitudinal study of children, the book considers whether or not all children can participate fully and equitably in contemporary Irish society. It asks whether or not we do, in fact, cherish all our children equally in modern Ireland, regardless of their family circumstances, health or ethnic background. Tables of contents: 1. Introduction 2. Changing perceptions an...
This article draws on qualitative evidence from an evaluation of the Greater Tomorrow Crèche and B...
The welfare of children is a key concern of Irish society and of government policy. A major new proj...
Key Findings from the report include: • There are just over 56,400 nine-year-olds in Ireland. Just ...
Growing Up in Ireland is the national longitudinal study of children. Its core objectives include de...
Aspiration and actuality: childhood inequality and the legacy of 1916.As we enter 2016, the controve...
This article serves as an introduction to a special issue of Irish Economic and Social History (Vol....
Growing Up in Ireland is a national study of children. It is the most significant of its kind ever t...
Growing Up in Ireland – the National Longitudinal Study of Children tracks the development of two gr...
Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) is the national longitudinal study of children in Ireland, launched in 2...
Traditionally, children and young people in Ireland have not been given the opportunity to have thei...
Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) follows the development of two cohorts of children, one aged nine months...
Conceptualisations and constructs of children and childhood are temporally and contextually grounded...
The history of children and childhood in eighteenth-century Ireland has long been overlooked. Yet ov...
Our concept of childhood is context-linked and time-specific. This paper traces the evolution of ou...
In Ireland, as in many European countries, the rate of poverty and deprivation is higher for childre...
This article draws on qualitative evidence from an evaluation of the Greater Tomorrow Crèche and B...
The welfare of children is a key concern of Irish society and of government policy. A major new proj...
Key Findings from the report include: • There are just over 56,400 nine-year-olds in Ireland. Just ...
Growing Up in Ireland is the national longitudinal study of children. Its core objectives include de...
Aspiration and actuality: childhood inequality and the legacy of 1916.As we enter 2016, the controve...
This article serves as an introduction to a special issue of Irish Economic and Social History (Vol....
Growing Up in Ireland is a national study of children. It is the most significant of its kind ever t...
Growing Up in Ireland – the National Longitudinal Study of Children tracks the development of two gr...
Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) is the national longitudinal study of children in Ireland, launched in 2...
Traditionally, children and young people in Ireland have not been given the opportunity to have thei...
Growing Up in Ireland (GUI) follows the development of two cohorts of children, one aged nine months...
Conceptualisations and constructs of children and childhood are temporally and contextually grounded...
The history of children and childhood in eighteenth-century Ireland has long been overlooked. Yet ov...
Our concept of childhood is context-linked and time-specific. This paper traces the evolution of ou...
In Ireland, as in many European countries, the rate of poverty and deprivation is higher for childre...
This article draws on qualitative evidence from an evaluation of the Greater Tomorrow Crèche and B...
The welfare of children is a key concern of Irish society and of government policy. A major new proj...
Key Findings from the report include: • There are just over 56,400 nine-year-olds in Ireland. Just ...