Children and SocietyRoutledge, 2014 M09 25 - 368 páginas Provides a comprehensive overview of the issues, research and debates relating to children and the experience of childhood in late twentieth century Britain. This volume will address key issues such as juvenile crime, poverty, child protection and children's rights and their implications for the development of policy and services for children. Presents first hand accounts from children and parents. |
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... parents. A developing sense of identity is crucially affected not only by identification with and reaction against parents or carers, but also by a sense of belonging to or association with wider social groupings, which may be based on ...
... parents. A developing sense of identity is crucially affected not only by identification with and reaction against parents or carers, but also by a sense of belonging to or association with wider social groupings, which may be based on ...
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... parents to bring up children with little government support or interference, so the state should have a minimal role except in helping the very poor. Others believe that parents' responsibilities to promote children's wellbeing are best ...
... parents to bring up children with little government support or interference, so the state should have a minimal role except in helping the very poor. Others believe that parents' responsibilities to promote children's wellbeing are best ...
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... parents, except in extreme cases when compulsory intervention is needed (cf. residual- liberal welfare state, Table 1.1) 2 Protectionist - society should intervene promptly when children are at risk and make ready use of legal sanctions ...
... parents, except in extreme cases when compulsory intervention is needed (cf. residual- liberal welfare state, Table 1.1) 2 Protectionist - society should intervene promptly when children are at risk and make ready use of legal sanctions ...
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... parents enjoying the company of their children at least from the sixteenth century onwards. According to her sources, the majority of children were not subjected to brutality and the parent-child relationship was often more informal ...
... parents enjoying the company of their children at least from the sixteenth century onwards. According to her sources, the majority of children were not subjected to brutality and the parent-child relationship was often more informal ...
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... parent's care and supervision. The child has the right; the parent has the duty; and the duty is for care and ... parents are unable to meet this duty, the state has secondary responsibility. Who is the 'state'? The duty no longer ...
... parent's care and supervision. The child has the right; the parent has the duty; and the duty is for care and ... parents are unable to meet this duty, the state has secondary responsibility. Who is the 'state'? The duty no longer ...
Contenido
Chapter 3 Childrens needs | |
Chapter 4 Childrens family relationships | |
Chapter 5 Childrens peer relationships activities and cultures | |
Chapter 8 An adequate standard of living | |
Chapter 9 Children who commit crimes | |
Chapter 10 Child abuse and child protection | |
Chapter 11 Separated children | |
reevaluating concepts and policies | |
References | |
Appendix I | |
Index | |
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Términos y frases comunes
activities adoption adulthood adults affected Aldgate Article attachment theory Audit Commission behaviour bullying carers cent Chapter chil child abuse Child Protection child sexual abuse child’s childhood Children Act 1989 children in need children’s hearings children’s lives children’s needs children’s rights citizenship concept concerned CRDU crime culture decisions Developmental Psychology disabled discourse divorce dren dren’s emphasised employment England and Wales ensure ethnic example exclusion feel FGCs foster girls Hill HMSO households individual Jessica Kingsley justice juvenile legislation London mothers offenders parents participation particular Parties peers person perspectives play poverty present Convention promote quoted recognised relation relationships reported responsibility risk role Routledge Scotland Scottish Scottish Office seen separation sexual abuse siblings social socialisation society tend theory tion Triseliotis truancy United Nations University Press views welfare women young people’s youth