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Different Dads

Different Dads

Jill Harrison | Matthew Henderson | Rob Leonard

(2007)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

Fathers of disabled children can feel overlooked when the focus of much parenting support is aimed at mothers. Different Dads is a collection of inspiring personal testimonies written by fathers of children with a disability who reflect on their own experiences and offer advice to other fathers and families on the challenges of raising a child with a disability.

The fathers featured represent a broad spectrum of experience. Their contributions reflect a wide range of cultures; some are single fathers, others are married adoptive fathers. What they all have in common are the challenges that face them and their families in raising a child with a disability. Issues explored include the reactions of family, friends and colleagues, how to deal with the organisations and professionals that support families with a disabled child, and the difficulty of being open about feelings in a culture that doesn't always expect men to have a sensitive or nurturing role.

Offering direct and thoughtful perspectives on being a father of a child with a disability, this book will be a valuable source of support and information for families with disabled children, and also for health and social care professionals who work with these families.


This book will offer invaluable insights for anyone concerned with families with a disabled child. The fathers talk movingly about how they responded when they realised their child was disabled – the grief, the sense of loss, the challenges, but above all the enduring love, the sense of pride and connection to their child, and the stories of what they have learnt and gained along the way'

This book should give confidence and inspiration to health and social care professionals to engage with fathers'.


Fatherhood Institute E-newsletter

This book is a must read for any parent who has a child with a disability. There is at least one story that families can relate to. Dads may also feel they are not alone, while mums may no realise the father's perspective. It is an easy read although the subject material is sometimes distressing. This is the reality and I believe a greater understanding will be developed.

In Summary this book provides an excellent resource and is very informative. As a dad and a professional myself, I can recommend this wholeheartedly.


GAP Good Autism Practice

I found this incredibly moving and difficult to read without crying. It is impossible to read in one sitting, but good to dip into, to be reminded of how difficult the position can be. There are 21 stories of dads in different circumstances with disabled children. Some are married, or live with partners. Others are raising children alone. Some are divorced and having trouble keeping contact with their children.

The conclusion is very useful, full of helpful hints on how to obtain support and do the right thing for the children. It is difficult, but not impossible to be the father of a child affected by disability…It is a very encouraging work, and well worth reading.


Families Need Fathers
“Us men” do not readily express our feelings and to have a book that expresses men's thoughts and feelings towards their own disabled child was a great opportunity to see whether there are other dads out there who feel like me. The book gives the reader an amazing insight to these 21 very different Dads' lives, each giving an account of their child's disability, their feelings, family background and their child's development. Each account ends with a piece of advice from these dads to other fathers and there are many various offers of advice, but the overwhelming sense of strength and optimism is clear and humbling to read…I certainly could connect and identify with many of these dads and would recommend it to other dads of children with hemiplegia to read because the overriding positive comments do make you reflect on your own well being: John (dad of two-year-old Rhiannon) says, “if able-bodied people had the same determination as disabled folk, then we would all be winners.”
HemiHelp
It is a great idea to draw together stories of fathers' experiences in bringing up disabled children. One of the ways parents manage to cope is to know that others have been through the same experiences. Then you learn that it isn't just about coping – there are positive stories to tell.
David Cameron, Prime Minister

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
1. Introduction
2. Multidimensional child poverty and the SDGs: From measurement to action
3. Women’s Empowerment and Impact on Child Nutrition in Sub-Saharan Africa
4. Driving factors of educational enrolment and attendance: Impact of the 2012 conflict
5. Delving deeper into child poverty and its drivers in sub-Saharan African: A multidimensional approach for Nigeria
6. Achieving child-centred SDGs in Ethiopia: The potential of inter-sectoral synergies
7. Weather shocks and children’s growth deprivations: Understanding and mitigating the impact
8. Child-sensitive non-contributory social protection in North Africa
9. Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme and adolescent wellbeing: Evidence from Gender and Adolescence Global Evidence (GAGE)
10. Social protection for livelihood sustainability in Ghana: Does LEAP cash transfer eradicate extreme poverty?
11. Child-sensitive protection programme on hunger and malnutrition in under-five year children in Nigeria
12. Can cash transfers transform child wellbeing in fragile contexts? Evidence from Liberia’s Bomi cash transfer pilot
13. Rethinking public finance for children: Monitoring for results. Evidence from Uganda
14. Children, disabilities and poverty: Enforcing the human right to inclusive education in sub-Saharan Africa
15. Ensuring children’s social protection in the Democratic Republic of Congo: A case Study of combatting child labour in the Copper-Cobalt Belt
16. The life of Ba’Aka children and their rights: Between the processes of poverty and deprivation