معرفی کتاب «Protecting children in time : child abuse, child protection, and the consequences of modernity» نوشتهٔ Harry Ferguson، منتشرشده توسط نشر Palgrave Macmillan Limited در سال 2004. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Across the western world, child protection systems are in crisis. Failures to protect vulnerable children in time from avoidable abuse and even death have hung like dark shadows over the child protection professions. But how has the powerful idea that we ought to be able to protect all children in our late-modern society developed? Where should our child protection professions go from here? In this original and important book Harry Ferguson examines the emergence and development of modern child protection practices. Drawing on case-studies from the last 130 years and the work of leading social theorists, the author exposes the real experience of 'doing' child protection in modern society. Protecting Children in Time re-examines the dynamic relationships between the professions involved in child protection, families and at-risk children themselves, and ultimately provides vital insights that will help to advance the protection of children in better times. Read more... Content: Protecting children in time, or failing to : child abuse, child protection and modernity -- Taking it onto the streets : the discovery of child death and birth of child protection, 1870-1914 -- The smell of practice : child protection, the body and the experience of modernity -- From day-to-day quietly and without fuss : child protection, simple modernity and the repression of knowledge of child death, 1914-70 -- Child physical abuse and the return of death since the 1970s : child protection, risk and reflexive modernization -- Child sexual abuse and the reflexive project of the self : child protection, individualization and life politics -- Into another world : child neglect, multi-problem families and the psychosocial dynamics of late-modern child protection -- Liquid welfare : child protection and the consequences of modernity. Abstract: Across the western world, child protection systems are in crisis. Failures to protect vulnerable children in time from avoidable abuse and even death have hung like dark shadows over the child protection professions. But how has the powerful idea that we ought to be able to protect all children in our late-modern society developed? Where should our child protection professions go from here? In this original and important book Harry Ferguson examines the emergence and development of modern child protection practices. Drawing on case-studies from the last 130 years and the work of leading social theorists, the author exposes the real experience of 'doing' child protection in modern society. Protecting Children in Time re-examines the dynamic relationships between the professions involved in child protection, families and at-risk children themselves, and ultimately provides vital insights that will help to advance the protection of children in better times "A wonderfully interesting examination of the temporal, spatial and sensuous complexities of 'child protection'. Ferguson demonstrates how relationships, officials, procedures and children are all 'on the move' and provides new insights into how this creates both opportunities and risks in protecting children from danger and death."--John Urry, Professor of Sociology, University of Lancaster, UK 'A major work which both deepens and extends our understanding of those who maltreat, those who are maltreated and those who are asked to respond taking a long and original look at child protection from the mid-nineteenth century to the present. The book finds a place for psychology and the emotions, for intimacy and relationships, for the unconscious and irrational. Ferguson elegantly celebrates the uplifting and unpredictable nature of the human condition, a state which if explored and embraced allows professionals and parents to meet, engage and understand so that children may not only survive physically but also thrive socially.' - David Howe, Dean of the School of Social Work and Psychosocial Studies, University of East Anglia, UK 'Protecting Children in Time is an analysis for our times. It effectively combines historical and present day case material with current social theorising to create cogent new ways of seeing current dilemmas. It succeeds in doing just what many analyses should seek to achieve but often do not - to be both intellectually satisfying and practically relevant.' - Jan Fook, Director of the Centre for Professional Development, LaTrobe University, Australia 'Never before has the issue of child protection been examined so thoroughly and so thoughtfully. In the last instance, Ferguson's analysis serves as an appeal to all those who are too quick to judge and condemn professional failings to celebrate instead the daily performance of social workers and other professionals whose job it is to translate into actions the ever evolving meaning of child protection in a context of increasing life scripts and ways of living that are the consequence of modernity.' - Journal of Social Policy ' ... a splendidly rich tour de force' - Journal of Social Work Protecting Children in Time provides a highly original analysis of the origins and development of the taken-for-granted notion that it is possible through social intervention to protect children from avoidable harm and even death, to protect children in time . By using case-studies which span the past 120 years of 'modern' practices and drawing on the work of leading social theorists of modernity and risk society it provides a new way of thinking about constructions of child abuse as a social problem and child protection as a late-modern expert system and experience. It proposes new ways of conceptualizing relationships between professionals, children at risk and families and deepens our understanding of what effective interventions have to involve.
Protecting Children in Time provides a highly original analysis of the origins and development of the taken-for-granted notion that it is possible through social intervention to protect children from avoidable harm and even death. By using case studies which span the past 120 years of "modern" practices and drawing on the work of leading social theorists of modernity and risk society it provides a new way of thinking about constructions of child abuse as a social problem and child protection as a late-modern expert system and experience. It proposes new ways of conceptualizing relationships between professionals, children at risk and families and deepens our understanding of what effective interventions have to involve.
This study analyses the notion that it is possible through social intervention to protect children from avoidable harm and even death 'in time'. It proposes new ways of conceptualizing relationships between professionals, children at risk and families andlooks at what is involved in intervening effectively