Over 30 years ago, the United Nations developed the Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), heralding the importance of protecting children from a range of human rights violations.
Among these are the right to be free from abuse and neglect at the hands of parents or other caregivers, and the responsibility of states to devise a protective response.
How nations conceptualize harm and even how they define childhood varies markedly across the globe.
This Handbook describes and analyzes the ways in which 50 countries from every continent, except Antarctica, have devised measures for child protection emphasized in the UNCRC. The Handbook discusses the legislative responses, public administrative systems, and the social service networks that governments have put in place to secure the protection of children against maltreatment and exploitation. Synthesizing data from across the world, the authors suggest a global typology of child protection systems for understanding the diversity of service responses.
The typology consists of five ideal types that have as their emphasis protection against an array of risks to childhood and that represent the focal point for government intervention in the lives of families. They include child exploitation protective systems, child deprivation protective systems, child maltreatment protective systems, child well-being protective systems, and child rights protective systems.
The Handbook is a valuable resource for researchers, students, and policymakers attempting to craft thoughtful state responses to children's needs
Edited by:
Jill Duerr Berrick (Professor Professor UC Berkeley),
Neil Gilbert (Chernin Professor of Social Welfare,
Chernin Professor of Social Welfare,
University of California,
Berkeley),
Marit Skivenes (Professor,
Professor,
University of Bergen)
Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Publication: United States
Dimensions:
Height: 188mm,
Width: 256mm,
Spine: 60mm
Weight: 1.978kg
ISBN: 9780197503546
ISBN 10: 0197503543
Pages: 1016
Publication Date: 18 May 2023
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
Table of Contents 1 Child Protection Systems Across the World Jill Duerr Berrick, Neil Gilbert and Marit Skivenes Section I - Institutionalized 2 Child Protection in Australia and New Zealand: An Overview of Systems Judith Cashmore and Nicola Taylor 3 The Austrian Child Welfare System: Moving Towards Professionalization and Participation Katrin Kriz, Jenny Krutzinna and Peter Pantucek-Eisenbacher 4 Child Protection in Belgium: An Overview of the Systems Johan Vanderfaeillie, Erik Van Dooren and Jessica Segers 5 Child Welfare in Canada Nico Trocmé, Melanie Doucet, Barbara Fallon, Jennifer Nutton, and Tonino Esposito 6 The Child Protection Systems in Denmark and Norway Anne-Dorthe Hestbæk, Marit Skivenes, Asgeir Falch-Eriksen, Idamarie Leth Svendsen and Elisabeth Backe-Hansen 7 Child Welfare and Child Protection Services in England June Thoburn 8 Child Protection in Finland and Sweden Ingrid Höjer and Tarja Pösö 9 Child Protection and Welfare in France Flora Bolter 10 Child Protection and Welfare in Germany Kay Biesel and Heinz Kindler 11 Child Protection and Welfare on the Island of Ireland: Irish Issues, Global Relevance Kenneth Burns, John Devaney, Stephanie Holt and Gerry Marshall 12 Child Protection in Israel Daphna Gross-Manos, Eran Melkman and Aya Almog-Zaken 13 Child Protection in Mediterranean Countries: Italy and Greece Teresa Bertotti, Roberta T. Di Rosa, Charis Asimopoulos 14 A New Era for Child Protection in Japan Shoko Tokunaga, Mitsuru Fukui, Misa Saigo and Saki Nagano 15 The Child Protection System in the Netherlands: Characteristics, Trends, and Evidence Erik J. Knorth, Helen Bouma, Hans Grietens and Mónica López López 16 The Development of the Korean Child Protection System: Cultural Influences, Unique Challenges, and Policy Strategies Yiyoon Chung and TJ Lah 17 Child Protection Systems in Spain Sagrario Segado 18 Child Protection and Children's Services in Switzerland Stefan Schnurr 19 Child Protection in the United States Jennifer Lawson and Jill Duerr Berrick Section II - Emerging 20 The Chilean Child Protection System Carolina Muñoz-Guzman, Miguel Cillero Bruñol, Mariana Bernasconi 21 Czech Child Protection after 1989: Between Socialist Legacy and the European Call for Democratic Legitimacy Victoria Shmidt 22 Child Protection Systems in Estonia and Latvia Merle Linno and Judit Strömpl 23 Child Protection in Lithuania Ilona Tamutiene, Dalija Snieskiene 24 Child Protection in Poland Violetta Tanas 25 Child Protection in Portugal Jorge Ferreira 26 Child Protection System in the Slovak Republic Kvasnáková Lenka, Balogová Beáta 27 Child Protection in South Africa Julia Sloth-Nielsen 28 Child Protection System in Uruguay María del Luján González Tornaría and Delfina Miller Section III - Nascent 29 Building the Child Protection System in Argentina Carla Villata and Valeria Lobet 30 Child Protection Systems in Brazil Diene Monique Carlos, Ailton de Souza Aragão, Eliana Mendes de Souza Teixeira Roque, Lygie Maria Pereira da Silva 31 Child Protection Policy and Service in China Fang Zhao and Yanfeng Xu 32 Colombian Child Protection System María Cristina Torrado P. and Ernesto Duran Strauch 33 Ecuador: Child Protection Systems Verónica Jiménez Borja, Micaela Jiménez Borja, and Teresa Borja Álvarez 34 Child Protection in Egypt Hmoud S. Olimat and Amal A. ElGama 35 Child Protection Systems in Ghana Mavis Dako-Gyeke, Abigail Adubea Mills, and Doris Akyere Boateng 36 Child Protection System in India: An Overview Sanjai Bhatt and Subhashree Sanyal 37 The Social Construction and Development of an Integrated Child Protection System: In Search of Core Templates in a Diversified and Decentralized Indonesia Erna Dinata 38 Child Protection in Iran Marzieh Takaffoli, Meroe Vameghi, Maliheh Arshi, Leila Ostadhashemi 39 Child Protection in Lebanon Hoda Rizk 40 Children at Risk in Mexico: Issues, Policies, and Interventions Martha Frías Armenta 41 Child Protection System in Nigeria Chimezie Elekwachi 42 Protecting Children in the Philippines: A System Focused Overview of Policy and Practice Steven Roche and Florence Flores-Pasos 43 Reforming Russia's Child Protection System: From Residential to Family Care Meri Kulmala, Maija Jäppinen and Zhanna Chernova 44 Child Protection Systems in Uganda Deogratias Yiga 45 Making Child Protection Systems Work for Children: Lessons from Zimbabwe Mildred T. Mushunje Conclusion 46 Child Protection Systems: A Global Typology Jill Duerr Berrick, Neil Gilbert and Marit Skivenes
Jill Duerr Berrick serves as the Zellerbach Family Foundation Professor in the School of Social Welfare at U.C. Berkeley. Berrick's research focuses on the relationship of the state to vulnerable families, particularly those touched by the child welfare system. She has written or co-written 11 books on topics relating to family poverty, child maltreatment, and child welfare services and has written extensively for academic journals. Berrick's research approach typically relies upon the voices of service system consumers to identify the impacts of social problems and social service solutions in family life. Her newest book, The Impossible Imperative: Navigating the Competing Principles of Child Protection examines child welfare professionals and the morally contentious and intellectually demanding choices they regularly face in their work with children and families. Neil Gilbert is Chernin Professor of Social Welfare at U.C. Berkeley. He has served as a Senior Research Fellow at the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development and a Visiting Scholar at the International Social Security Association in Geneva. Gilbert was awarded two Senior Fulbright Research Fellowships to study European Social Policy at the London School of Economics, the National Institute of Social Work and the University of Stockholm. He has served as a visiting Professor at McGill University and Hamburg University. His publications include thirty-two books and over 130 articles that have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Public Interest, Society, Commentary, and leading academic journals. Several of his books were translated into Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Italian and widely reviewed in venues such as the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, The New Republic, the Wall Street Journal, and the Atlantic. Gilbert is chairman of the Board of Seneca Family of Agencies and a recipient of the University of Pittsburgh Bicentennial Medallion of Distinction. Marit Skivenes is a professor in political science at the University of Bergen, Norway, and the director of Centre for Research on Discretion and Paternalism. Prof. Skivenes has published numerous research articles in the field of child protection and children´s rights, with a focus is on the legitimacy of state interventions and the quality of decisions made in the best interest of the child. She has been the Principal Investigator for large international research projects, and been co-editor on several cross-country books on child protection.