ABSTRACT

While social work practice with child abuse is a well-documented topic, this revised edition of Social Work and Child Abuse actually challenges and changes the focus of existing literature. Instead of concerning itself with the ways in which the task of preventing and detecting child abuse can be more effectively undertaken, it presents a critical analysis of the task itself.

There has been much new guidance and regulation since the first edition of Social Work and Child Abuse was published in 1996, making this a timely new edition. With a brand new introduction and conclusion, this fully revised text discusses:

  • the implications of the Victoria Climbié Inquiry, the Laming Report, the Green Paper Every Child Matters and the 2004 Children Act
  • the 1989 Children Act and the conflicting duties of the social worker to prevent and intervene in child abuse and also to promote 'the family'
  • the emergence of official discourses of prevention, treatment and punishment
  • the 1975 Children Act and the role of moral panic.

Concluding with a call for the full implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child to strengthen the child protection system by giving children and young people a much stronger voice, this book is essential reading for all professionals in social and probation work, and for students in social work, social policy and criminology.

chapter Chapter 1|29 pages

Teaching or preaching?

chapter Chapter 2|24 pages

Questions of theory

chapter Chapter 3|28 pages

Still walking the tightrope?

chapter Chapter 4|27 pages

The 1989 Children Act

A significant shift?

chapter Chapter 5|29 pages

A stitch in time

The men from the ministry

chapter Chapter 7|29 pages

Moral panic and Maria Colwell

chapter Chapter 8|17 pages

Back to the future