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Beyond the risk paradigm in child protection / edited by Marie Connolly.

Material type: TextTextSeries: Beyond the risk paradigm | Beyond the risk paradigmPublisher: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017Publisher: ©2017Description: 225 pagesContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781137441294
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • HV713 BEY
Contents:
Preface Chapter 1: Concerns about Risk as a Major Driver of Professional Practice (Nigel Parton) Chapter 2: The risk paradigm and the media in child protection (Liz Beddoe and Viviene Cree) Chapter 3: Anticipating risk: Predictive risk modeling as a signal of adversity (Irene de Haan and Marie Connolly) Chapter 4: New knowledge in child protection: Neuroscience and its impacts (Clare Huntingdon) Chapter 5: Disproportionality and risk decision-making in child protection (Ilan Katz and Marie Connolly) Chapter 6: Service users as receivers of risk-dominated practice (Helen Buckley) Chapter 7: Engaging Families and Managing Risk in Practice (Kate Morris and Gale Burford) Chapter 8: Assessment and Decision Making to Improve Outcomes in Child Protection (Aron Shlonsky and Robyn Mildon) Chapter 9: Signs of Safety as Promising Comprehensive Approach for Reorienting CPS Organizations' Work with Children, Families and Their Community Supports (Andrew Turnell, Peter J. Pecora, Yvonne H. Roberts, Mike Caslor, Dan Koziolek) Chapter 10: Shifting the focus: working differently with domestic violence (Cathy Humphreys and Nicky Stanley) Chapter 11: Family risk and responsive regulation (Joan Pennell) Chapter 12: Responding Differently to Neglect - an ecological approach to prevention, assessment and treatment (Justine Harris and Robyn Mildon) Chapter 13: Positive leadership in child protection (Robyn Miller) Chapter 14: Concluding Thoughts: Informal and formal support for vulnerable children and families (Marie Connolly).
Summary: For decades, child protection systems have striven to provide responsive services to vulnerable children and families in the face of the constant change and instability caused by the bureaucratization of child protection.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book School of Social Work Library Open Shelf HV713 BEY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 156290 Available BK143648

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Preface Chapter 1: Concerns about Risk as a Major Driver of Professional Practice (Nigel Parton) Chapter 2: The risk paradigm and the media in child protection (Liz Beddoe and Viviene Cree) Chapter 3: Anticipating risk: Predictive risk modeling as a signal of adversity (Irene de Haan and Marie Connolly) Chapter 4: New knowledge in child protection: Neuroscience and its impacts (Clare Huntingdon) Chapter 5: Disproportionality and risk decision-making in child protection (Ilan Katz and Marie Connolly) Chapter 6: Service users as receivers of risk-dominated practice (Helen Buckley) Chapter 7: Engaging Families and Managing Risk in Practice (Kate Morris and Gale Burford) Chapter 8: Assessment and Decision Making to Improve Outcomes in Child Protection (Aron Shlonsky and Robyn Mildon) Chapter 9: Signs of Safety as Promising Comprehensive Approach for Reorienting CPS Organizations' Work with Children, Families and Their Community Supports (Andrew Turnell, Peter J. Pecora, Yvonne H. Roberts, Mike Caslor, Dan Koziolek) Chapter 10: Shifting the focus: working differently with domestic violence (Cathy Humphreys and Nicky Stanley) Chapter 11: Family risk and responsive regulation (Joan Pennell) Chapter 12: Responding Differently to Neglect - an ecological approach to prevention, assessment and treatment (Justine Harris and Robyn Mildon) Chapter 13: Positive leadership in child protection (Robyn Miller) Chapter 14: Concluding Thoughts: Informal and formal support for vulnerable children and families (Marie Connolly).

For decades, child protection systems have striven to provide responsive services to vulnerable children and families in the face of the constant change and instability caused by the bureaucratization of child protection.

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