ABSTRACT

This book provides an account of parenting support initiatives in children and family services from a number of jurisdictions, paying particular attention to their impact on both ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ outcomes for participants and to the inclusion of parents in the design and delivery of these supports.

By focusing on parents who are experiencing challenges outside of the normal day-to-day task of parenting and in receipt of formal support services, their perspectives on the experience of receiving these supports and the difference experienced by children and family members are analysed. Conceptually driven and reflecting the individual theories and frameworks that underpinned the parenting supports, the participatory processes and the research undertaken, this book includes case studies from Australia, Bulgaria, England, Italy, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Scotland, Serbia and Spain. By highlighting the theoretical, conceptual and practical considerations required when supporting parents in an inclusive manner, it will be of interest to all scholars, students and practitioners working in the following areas: social work and social care, child development, child protection and social policy.

part |125 pages

Part I

chapter 5|16 pages

Harnessing the power of evidence

Parental participation in one early learning and childcare setting in Scotland

part |159 pages

Part II

chapter 10|21 pages

The implementation and effectiveness of group-based programmes for mainly vulnerable parent populations

Key findings and lessons from research conducted in Ireland

chapter 12|16 pages

Let's reflect together

Building capabilities through participative assessment of the child's needs

chapter 17|16 pages

Parental participation and community family support

‘Family Support Hubs’ in Northern Ireland and ‘Family Hubs’ in England

chapter 18|14 pages

Key learning and final remarks

Parenting support and parental participation