Children, Family Responsibilities and the State
(Sprache: Englisch)
In this volume the authors and editors explore the growing (particularly state) interest in the way in which it (the state) polices, and ought to police, families failing in their responsibilities. In considering this subject we also reflect on the...
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In this volume the authors and editors explore the growing (particularly state) interest in the way in which it (the state) polices, and ought to police, families failing in their responsibilities. In considering this subject we also reflect on the responsibilities the state has or ought to bear for families.
Klappentext zu „Children, Family Responsibilities and the State “
In this volume the authors and editors explore the growing (particularly state) interest in the way in which it (the state) polices, and ought to police, families failing in their responsibilities. In considering this subject we also reflect on the responsibilities the state has or ought to bear for families. The essays consider some of the swiftly developing government policy in this area and reflect on increasing social science research and growing legal system involvement in the 'problem' of failing families particularly where children are involved. The scope of the work is fairly broad. It ranges from the state's attempts to foster responsible parenting by training parents and by punishing them and their children for their children's antisocial behaviour to its enthusiasm for creating frameworks for better substituted parenting (through fostering and adoption). The authors consider the problems they identify from the perspective of both empirical evidence and the practical and ideological ambitions that government policy is attempting to pursue.The volume brings together commentators from a variety of disciplines in an attempt to offer a fresh critique on these matters. The essays are based on symposium held at the University of Sussex in September 2006.
In this volume the authors and editors explore the growing (particularly state) interest in the way in which it (the state) polices, and ought to police, families failing in their responsibilities. In considering this subject we also reflect on the responsibilities the state has or ought to bear for families. The essays consider some of the swiftly developing government policy in this area and reflect on increasing social science research and growing legal system involvement in the 'problem' of failing families particularly where children are involved. The scope of the work is fairly broad. It ranges from the state's attempts to foster responsible parenting by training parents and by punishing them and their children for their children's antisocial behaviour to its enthusiasm for creating frameworks for better substituted parenting (through fostering and adoption). The authors consider the problems they identify from the perspective of both empirical evidence and the practical and ideological ambitions that government policy is attempting to pursue.
The volume brings together commentators from a variety of disciplines in an attempt to offer a fresh critique on these matters. The essays are based on symposium held at the University of Sussex in September 2006.
The volume brings together commentators from a variety of disciplines in an attempt to offer a fresh critique on these matters. The essays are based on symposium held at the University of Sussex in September 2006.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Children, Family Responsibilities and the State “
1. Introduction: Responsible Parents and a Responsible State: Craig Lind and Heather Keating.2. Adoption support and the negotiation of ambivalence in family policy and children's services: Barry Luckock.
3. Making and Breaking Family Life: Adoption, the State and Human Rights: Sonia Harris-Short.
4. The state as parent: The reluctant parent? The problems of parents of last resort: Judith Masson.
5. Child Maltreatment in Diverse Households: Challenges to Child Care Law, Theory and Practice: Julia Brophy.
6. Perspectives on Parenting Responsibility: Contextualising Values and Practices: Val Gillies.
7. Holding Parents to Account: Tough on Children, Tough on the Causes of Children?: Laurence Koffman.
8. Youth Crime: Whose Responsibility?: Alex Newbury.
9. Governing Parenting: Is there a case for a policy review and statement of parenting rights and responsibilities?: Clem Henricson.
10. The 'Change for Children' Agenda in England: Towards the 'Preventive-Surveillance State': Nigel Parton
Autoren-Porträt von Heather Keating
Craig Lind has law degrees from the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg and the London School of Economics. He has taught at the University of the Witwatersrand, the University of Wales, Aberystwyth and is now a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Sussex, Brighton. He teaches undergraduate and postgraduate courses in Family Law and Public Law. His major research interests lie in the areas of Family Law, Gender and Sexuality with a strong international and cultural focus.Heather Keating has law degrees from the University of the Leicester and the University of London. She has taught at Kingston University and is now a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Sussex, Brighton. She teaches undergraduate and postgraduate courses in Family Law and Criminal Law. Her major research interests lie in the areas of Family Law and Criminal law and focus on children.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Heather Keating
- 2008, 1. Auflage, 192 Seiten, Maße: 15,1 x 22,9 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Herausgegeben: Craig Lind
- Verlag: Wiley & Sons
- ISBN-10: 1405183012
- ISBN-13: 9781405183017
- Erscheinungsdatum: 14.07.2008
Sprache:
Englisch
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