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Biography of Ludwig Rajchman who was an exponent of humanitarian intervention and a defender of colonized people. He inspired the creation of WHO and UNICEF, of which he was the first chairman.
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This study, commissioned by the European Parliament's Policy Department for Citizens' Rights and Constitutional Affairs at the request of the JURI Committee, will be presented during a Workshop dedicated to potential and challenges of private international law in the current migratory context. The child's best interests are a primary consideration under international and EU law. EU migration and private international law frameworks regulate child protection, but in an uncoordinated way: the Dublin III and Brussels IIa Regulations are neither aligned nor applied coherently. This should change. In particular, the rules and mechanisms of Brussels IIa should be used to enhance the protection of migrant children. These include rules on jurisdiction to take protective measures, on applicable law, and on recognition and enforcement of protective measures, and mechanisms for cross-border cooperation between authorities.
Child protection. --- Children's rights. --- Family law. --- Migration law. --- Private international law. --- Transfrontier cooperation.
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Volume 1 "Policy Changes and Challenges" takes as its central theme the ongoing and challenging issues which child protection agencies have to address and the policy and practice initiatives that are developed to try and address these. The volume includes papers on: the relationship between the decline in the rate of ‘unnatural’ deaths and the growth of concern about child abuse in the USA between 1940 and 2005; mandatory reporting; the balance between providing urgent intervention and meeting chronic need; risk and the Public Law Outline in England; the nature and implications of ‘child centred’ policies; the impact of intimate partner and family violence; the intended and unintended consequences of high profile child abuse scandals; developing multi-disciplinary team work in a health setting; and the possibilities of technology-based innovations in prevention programmes.
child maltreatment --- family support --- child abuse --- child protection --- public protection --- the role of state --- family and community --- social surveillance --- risk to children
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"Protected Children, Regulated Mothers examines child protection in Stalinist Hungary as a part of twentieth-century (East Central, Eastern, and Southeastern) European history. Across the communist bloc, the increase of residential homes was preferred to the prewar system of foster care. The study challenges the transformation of state care into a tool of totalitarian power. Rather than political repression, educators mostly faced an arsenal of problems related to social and economic transformations following the end of World War II. They continued rather than cut with earlier models of reform and reformatory education. The author's original research based on hundreds of children's case files and interviews with institution leaders, teachers, and people formerly in state care demonstrates that child protection was not only to influence the behavior of children but also to regulate especially lone mothers' entrance to paid work and their sexuality. Children's homes both reinforced and changed existing patterns of the gendered division of work. A major finding of the book is that child protection had a centuries-long common history with the "solution to the Gypsy question" rooted in efforts towards the erasure of the perceived work-shyness of "Gypsies.""--
Romanies --- Child welfare --- Children --- History --- Institutional care --- Hungary. --- Hungary --- Child protection, Communism, Gender studies, Labor history, Roma studies, Romanies, Social history.
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Volume 1 "Policy Changes and Challenges" takes as its central theme the ongoing and challenging issues which child protection agencies have to address and the policy and practice initiatives that are developed to try and address these. The volume includes papers on: the relationship between the decline in the rate of ‘unnatural’ deaths and the growth of concern about child abuse in the USA between 1940 and 2005; mandatory reporting; the balance between providing urgent intervention and meeting chronic need; risk and the Public Law Outline in England; the nature and implications of ‘child centred’ policies; the impact of intimate partner and family violence; the intended and unintended consequences of high profile child abuse scandals; developing multi-disciplinary team work in a health setting; and the possibilities of technology-based innovations in prevention programmes.
child maltreatment --- family support --- child abuse --- child protection --- public protection --- the role of state --- family and community --- social surveillance --- risk to children
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Volume 1 "Policy Changes and Challenges" takes as its central theme the ongoing and challenging issues which child protection agencies have to address and the policy and practice initiatives that are developed to try and address these. The volume includes papers on: the relationship between the decline in the rate of ‘unnatural’ deaths and the growth of concern about child abuse in the USA between 1940 and 2005; mandatory reporting; the balance between providing urgent intervention and meeting chronic need; risk and the Public Law Outline in England; the nature and implications of ‘child centred’ policies; the impact of intimate partner and family violence; the intended and unintended consequences of high profile child abuse scandals; developing multi-disciplinary team work in a health setting; and the possibilities of technology-based innovations in prevention programmes.
child maltreatment --- family support --- child abuse --- child protection --- public protection --- the role of state --- family and community --- social surveillance --- risk to children --- child maltreatment --- family support --- child abuse --- child protection --- public protection --- the role of state --- family and community --- social surveillance --- risk to children
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Child protection. --- Child welfare. --- Child protective services --- Child protective services personnel --- Children --- CPS (Child protective services) --- Humane societies --- Protection of children --- Family policy --- Public welfare --- Social work with children --- Social work with youth --- Charities --- Charities, protection, etc. --- Protection
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Age group sociology --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Sociology of social care --- Criminal law. Criminal procedure --- Sexology --- Homosexuality --- Assistance --- Youth --- Child protection --- Romantic and sexual orientation --- Book --- United States of America
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Up until the latter years of the twentieth century, there was very little critical analysis of child protection policies and practices. The core assumption was that it was concerns about child abuse and neglect that provided the rationale and focus for child protection policies, practices, and systems, and they were assumed to be benign in both intent and impact. Increasingly, however, it has been recognised that a whole range of political, cultural, and sociological influences bear on the development and operation of child protection policies, practices, and systems and that these can have a whole range of negative consequences. The aim of this edited book, based on the Special Edition of the same title, is to provide a range of international cutting-edge papers that critically analyse different aspects of child protection, and which also provide suggestions about how child protection can be positively reformed.
Humanities --- Education --- subjective well-being --- residential care --- child protection system --- temporal comparability --- COVID-19 lockdown --- child protection --- comparative research --- child maltreatment --- social networks --- parental mediation --- minors --- children --- motivations --- relocation --- children in care --- adolescence --- extra-familial harm --- zemiology --- social harm --- disappearance --- abuse --- neglect --- victims --- abduction --- missing adolescent --- adolescents --- exploitation --- Contextual Safeguarding --- safe sport --- education --- reporting mechanisms --- supportive protection --- protective support --- supervision --- safety --- practitioner --- welfare --- support --- safeguarding --- International Safeguards --- activation states --- safety culture --- parents --- ambivalence --- recognition --- participation --- integrity --- parent advocacy --- co-production --- n/a
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This book includes chapters from a range of countries which critically reflect on recent developments in child protection policy and practice. It is a follow-up to ‘Contemporary Developments in Child Protection’ Volumes 1, 2 and 3, which were published by MDPI in 2015. It begins from the premise that the concerns of child protection have broadened considerably in recent years, and that the policies and practices are complex. It also begins from the recognition that child protection policies and practices are themselves shaped by a wide range of social, cultural and political factors, which vary both over time and in different contexts and jurisdictions.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- child protection --- predictive analytics --- rights --- social justice --- algorithms --- decision making --- social support --- foster care --- child welfare --- family needs --- content analysis --- care --- contextual safeguarding --- control --- extra-familial harm --- surveillance --- child abuse --- child protection and welfare --- public protection --- family support --- bio-ecological --- networks and networking --- social work --- complexity theory --- disability --- vulnerability --- safeguarding --- child rights --- family inclusion --- co-constructing social work --- practice frameworks --- young people and children --- institutionalization of children deprived of parental care --- de-institutionalization of child care and child protection --- root cause approach --- Kenya --- sport --- child --- athlete --- protection --- Canadian --- safe sport --- group intervention --- child sexual abuse --- child physical abuse --- reports --- child welfare systems --- mandatory reporting laws --- comparative analysis --- cross-jurisdictional analysis --- analysis over time --- agency data --- systems burden --- risk to children --- sustainable development goals --- convention on the rights of the child --- African charter on the rights and welfare of the child --- non-government organisations --- child protection system --- participation --- integrity --- autonomy --- historical analysis --- legal analysis --- participant observation --- human rights --- children's rights --- Switzerland --- child protection --- predictive analytics --- rights --- social justice --- algorithms --- decision making --- social support --- foster care --- child welfare --- family needs --- content analysis --- care --- contextual safeguarding --- control --- extra-familial harm --- surveillance --- child abuse --- child protection and welfare --- public protection --- family support --- bio-ecological --- networks and networking --- social work --- complexity theory --- disability --- vulnerability --- safeguarding --- child rights --- family inclusion --- co-constructing social work --- practice frameworks --- young people and children --- institutionalization of children deprived of parental care --- de-institutionalization of child care and child protection --- root cause approach --- Kenya --- sport --- child --- athlete --- protection --- Canadian --- safe sport --- group intervention --- child sexual abuse --- child physical abuse --- reports --- child welfare systems --- mandatory reporting laws --- comparative analysis --- cross-jurisdictional analysis --- analysis over time --- agency data --- systems burden --- risk to children --- sustainable development goals --- convention on the rights of the child --- African charter on the rights and welfare of the child --- non-government organisations --- child protection system --- participation --- integrity --- autonomy --- historical analysis --- legal analysis --- participant observation --- human rights --- children's rights --- Switzerland
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