Protecting Children, Creating Citizens

Protecting Children, Creating Citizens
Author: Katrin Kriz
Publisher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2022-03
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 144735589X

This book examines a participatory approach in child protection practices in Norway and the US. It explores empowering children and child protection workers to negotiate complex boundaries of the inclusion of children in decision-making.

Protecting Children, Creating Citizens

Protecting Children, Creating Citizens
Author: Katrin Križ
Publisher:
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2021
Genre: Child welfare
ISBN: 9781447355922

This text examines a participatory approach in child protection practices in Norway and the United States. It explores ways of empowering children; shows how they can be encouraged to express their own opinions and explores tools for child protection workers to negotiate complex boundaries around the inclusion of children in decision-making.

Protecting Children, Creating Citizens

Protecting Children, Creating Citizens
Author: Križ, Katrin
Publisher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 190
Release: 2020-09-23
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1447355911

This book examines a participatory approach in child protection practices in both Norway and the United States, despite key organizational differences. Križ explores ways that children can be empowered to participate in child protection investigations and decisions after removal from home. The author shows how children can be encouraged to develop and express their own opinions and explores tools for child protection workers to negotiate complex boundaries around the inclusion of children in decision-making. She presents valuable insights from front-line child protection professionals’ unique perspectives and experiences within two very different systems, and evaluates the impacts of different organizational practices in promoting children’s participation.

Protecting Children

Protecting Children
Author: Featherstone, Brid
Publisher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 253
Release: 2018-09-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1447332768

The state is increasingly experienced as both intrusive and neglectful, particularly by those living in poverty, leading to loss of trust and widespread feelings of alienation and disconnection. Against this tense background, this innovative book argues that child protection policies and practices have become part of the problem, rather than ensuring children’s well-being and safety. Building on the ideas in the best-selling Re-imagining child protection and drawing together a wide range of social theorists and disciplines, the book: • Challenges existing notions of child protection, revealing their limits; • Ensures that the harms children and families experience are explored in a way that acknowledges the social and economic contexts in which they live; • Explains how the protective capacities within families and communities can be mobilised and practices of co-production adopted; • Places ethics and human rights at the centre of everyday conversations and practices.

Raising Elijah

Raising Elijah
Author: Sandra Steingraber
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2011-03-29
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 0306819783

Nothing could be more important than the health of our children, and no one is better suited to examine the threats against it than Sandra Steingraber. Once called "a poet with a knife," she blends precise science with lyrical memoir. In Living Downstream she spoke as a biologist and cancer survivor; in Having Faith she spoke as an ecologist and expectant mother, viewing her own body as a habitat. Now she speaks as the scientist mother of two young children, enjoying and celebrating their lives while searching for ways to protect them -- and all children -- from the toxic, climate-threatened world they inhabit Each chapter of this engaging and unique book focuses on one inevitable ingredient of childhood -- everything from pizza to laundry to homework to the "Big Talk" -- and explores the underlying social, political, and ecological forces behind it. Through these everyday moments, Steingraber demonstrates how closely the private, intimate world of parenting connects to the public world of policy-making and how the ongoing environmental crisis is, fundamentally, a crisis of family life.