Selling Transracial Adoption: Families, Markets and the Colour Line, Elizabeth Raleigh
In: The British journal of social work, Band 51, Heft 8, S. 3397-3398
ISSN: 1468-263X
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In: The British journal of social work, Band 51, Heft 8, S. 3397-3398
ISSN: 1468-263X
In: The British journal of social work, Band 48, Heft 3, S. 860-861
ISSN: 1468-263X
This revised edition details organisational systems and structures that are part of the assessment and planning process for looked after children. This is closely interwoven with discussions about their emotional development, educational, health and cultural needs and how these needs can be met through social work and a range of other services. The views of looked after children are highlighted through case studies and summaries of research findings, and the range of skills and knowledge necessary to support looked after children through the key events they experience, including loss, change and the development of new relationships, are explained and illustrated.
In: Social work education, Band 30, Heft 3, S. 266-280
ISSN: 1470-1227
The first step of effective health and social care is always to accurately identify your client's needs. This theoretically informed guide will show you how to enhance and apply your observation skills as required by the College of Social Work in a variety of challenging health and social settings with children, families and adults
In: Child & family social work, Band 25, Heft 3, S. 526-535
ISSN: 1365-2206
AbstractGrowing numbers of grandparent special guardians (GSGs) are assuming responsibility for increasing numbers of children in the care system in England. Special guardianship arrangements are increasingly used as a permanency option as they allow children to remain in their kinship networks rather than in local authority care or be adopted; yet there is a scarcity of research on GSG carers' experiences. This paper reports a small qualitative research study where 10 sets of grandparents were interviewed to explore their journey to becoming GSGs and to theorize their subsequent experiences. Two themes emerge. First, experiences of the assessment process are elaborated, decisions often being made at a time of family crisis, impacting on GSGs: financial, employment, and relational. Second, GSGs' experiences of managing often challenging relationships and contact arrangements between the grandchildren and the parents reveal three main relationship management approaches emerging: containing‐flexible, containing‐controlled, and uncontained/defeated approaches. Anthropological concepts of affinity help theorize the GSGs' ambivalent responses to becoming carers in later life, enabling reconfigured kinship relationships in new family forms. Family policy and social work practice is critiqued as GSGs appear often left alone to "roll back the years," to heal previous harms done to the grandchildren who end up in their care.
In: Social work education, Band 31, Heft 1, S. 75-89
ISSN: 1470-1227
In: Practice: social work in action, Band 35, Heft 1, S. 75-78
ISSN: 1742-4909
In: Social work education, Band 25, Heft 4, S. 403-413
ISSN: 1470-1227