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Effective Child Protection

Effective Child Protection

Prof Eileen Munro

(2002)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

`A well-written and stimulating book. ... Child protection professionals, teachers and researchers will find this a book that both challenges and helps the reader not just be a passive recipient, but an active contributor in their own improved thinking' - YoungMinds Magazine

`Eileen Munro's Effective Child Protection is a `must read' for anyone concerned with enhancing child protection practice. It directly addresses a core issue-the relationship between intuition and formal analytic thinking in decision-making and practice. Effective child protection practice requires both, and Munro provides a framework that facilitates clear thinking in the complex real world of child protection practice. It is very well written, stimulating and accessible' - Professor Ian O'Connor, University of Queensland

`The definition of 'good child care social work' has been a contested one for several centuries. Enduring political and moral pressures have often obscured our understanding of what is helpful for children and their families; and have constrained the development of sound professional practice. Eileen Munro 's book performs a very valuable service in examining the context, purposes and operational requirements of effective child protection. Her analysis transcends short term panic-led responses and restores a welcome sense of proportion to the challenges involved in promoting and safeguarding the welfare of children. Social workers will find in this book, a range of reasoned, research based, and realistic pointers to good professional practice, set in a wide-ranging social and historical context. If they act on them, then children and families, with whom they work, might well get a much' - Professor Jane Tunstill Department of Science and Political Science Royal Holloway London University

`This book makes some interesting points... useful... for experienced and qualified social workers' - Peter Jenkins, Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal

`It will be helpful for anyone with responsibility for deciding the child's best interests who wishes to re-appraise their approach to decision-making and to develop their capacity for critical thinking' - Community Care

`This book makes a vital contribution to better decision-making in child care and will be essential reading for social workers and others in child protection' - Simon Bass, Caring Magazine

'Overall, the book is compelling reading for practitioners, administrators, and policy analysts in the field of child welfare'- Envision: The Manitoba Journal of Child Welfare

'The book makes the fully justified claim it will be essential reading for professionals undergoing qualifying and post-qualifying training. It is to be hoped that it will enjoy an even wider readership' - Child Abuse Review

This book is written for anyone involved in child protection and child welfare work who is interested in how to make better childcare decisions. The author provides a clear framework on decision-making, risk assessment and reasoning in addition to helping explain and justify decisions and judgements and the sources of any disagreements. Effective Child Protection analytic and intuitive methods of reasoning and proposes a model in which each method has strengths at different points in the process.

Using detailed case studies and graphics to provide memorable illustrations of key points, this book is an invaluable practical and theoretical addition to the complexities of making predictions about children's best interests and is written for social workers, nurses, police officers and health workers as well as those taking or teaching qualifying and post-qualifying courses in child protection and child care.
`[A] well-written and stimulating book. ... Child protection professionals, teachers and researchers will find this a book that both challenges and helps the reader not just be a passive recipient, but an active contributor in their own improved thinking' - YoungMinds Magazine

`The definition of 'good child care social work' has been a contested one for several centuries. Enduring political and moral pressures have often obscured our understanding of what is helpful for children and their families; and have constrained the development of sound professional practice. Eileen Munro 's book performs a very valuable service in examining the context, purposes and operational requirements of effective child protection. Her analysis transcends short term panic-led responses and restores a welcome sense of proportion to the challenges involved in promoting and safeguarding the welfare of children. Social workers will find in this book, a range of reasoned, research based, and realistic pointers to good professional practice, set in a wide-ranging social and historical context. If they act on them, then children and families, with whom they work, might well get a much'- Professor Jane Tunstill

Department of Science and Political Science

Royal Holloway London University

`This book makes some interesting points... useful... for experienced and qualified social workers' - Peter Jenkins, Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal

`It will be helpful for anyone with responsibility for deciding the child's best interests who wishes to re-appraise their approach to decision-making and to develop their capacity for critical thinking' - Community Care

`This book makes a vital contribution to better decision-making in child care and will be essential reading for social workers and others in child protection' - Simon Bass, Caring Magazine

`This book is written for anyone involved in child protection and child welfare work' - ChildRIGHT

'Child Protection workers from all disciplines and students will gain much from this book' - Community Practitioner

Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
1) Urban sustainability under threat: the restructuring of the fishing industry in Mar del Plata, Argentina - Adriana Allen;
2) International cooperation in pursuit of sustainable cities - Adrian Atkinson;
3) Learning from informal markets: innovative approaches to land and housing provision - Erhard Berner;
4) Cities for the urban poor in Zimbabwe: urban space as a resource for sustainable development - Alison Brown;
5) Democracy and social participation in Latin American cities - Diego Carrion M.;
6) Urban crisis in India: new initiatives for sustainable cities - P. G. Dhar Chakrabarti;
7) Unsustainable development: the Philippine experience - Karina Constantino-David;
8) Innovations for sustainable development in cities of the South: the Habitat-Cuba approach - Carlos Garcia Pleyan;
9) Sustainable development and democracy in the megacities - Jaime Joseph;
10) Institutionalising the concept of environmental planning and management (EPM): successes and challenges in Dar es Salaam - Wilbard K. Kombe;
11) Institutional innovations for urban infrastructural development: the Indian scenario - Amitabh Kundu;
12) Monitoring megacities: the Murbandy/Moland approach - Carlo Lavalle, Luca Demicheli, Maddalena Turchini, Pilar Casals-Carrasco, and Monika Niederhuber;
13) Sustainable urban development in India: an inclusive perspective - Darshini Mahadevia;
14) Private-public partnership, the compact city, and social housing: best practice for whom? - Fernando Murillo;
15) Residents' associations and information communication technologies: a suggested approach to international action-research - Cesare Ottolini;
16) Lowering the ladder: regulatory frameworks for sustainable development - Geoffrey Payne;
17) Technical versus popular language: some reflections on the vocabulary of urban management in Mexico and Brazil - Helene Riviere d'Arc