A political history of child protection : lessons for reform from Aotearoa New Zealand /
Exploring the current and historical tensions between liberal capitalism and indigenous models of family life, Ian Kelvin Hyslop argues for a new model of child protection in Aotearoa New Zealand and other parts of the Anglophone world.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Bristol, UK :
Policy Press,
2022.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover
- A Political History of Child Portection: Lessons for Reform from Aotearoa New Zealand
- Copyright information
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Glossary of Māori words
- About the author
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Power structures and problem definition
- Personal dimensions
- Political economy
- Re-politicising child protection
- Tensions and intersections
- Correlation and causation
- Modernisation and child protection
- Class analysis revisited
- A socialist perspective
- Class, race, gender and history
- Conflict and change
- The liberal inheritance
- 2 Origins of child protection in Aotearoa
- Sanitation
- Patterns and connections
- The liberal bones of welfare
- Middle-class benevolence
- Science and contamination
- Biopolitics
- Going native
- The spirit of colonial welfare
- Charitable inheritance
- Child welfare and social work: tracing lines of descent
- Care services
- Echoes of class and gendered discipline
- 3 Post-war child welfare
- Ideological boundaries
- The welfare state era
- Tensions and contradictions
- Professional identity
- State social work and child welfare
- The fifth social service
- Child and family bureaucracy
- Welfare visions and realities
- Changing times
- Benign authoritarianism
- A building crisis of faith
- Changing lenses: Indigenous narratives
- Maori and the post-war state
- Class, colonisation and racial inequality
- Demography, inequality and state care
- Prison disproportionality
- Racism and institutional abuse
- Institutional responses
- Rising Maori voices
- 4 The 1980s: a storm builds and breaks
- The child protection imperative
- The medico-professional wave
- Slow brewing conflict
- Care planning
- Matua Whangai
- Internal dissent and practice innovation
- Productive ambiguity
- Women against racism
- PtAT (day break)
- Legislative reform
- Legislation for whanau empowerment
- 5 Revolution from above: the neoliberal turn
- The roller coaster ride begins
- Turning the political screw
- The business of state social work
- Devolution reframed
- Forks in the new path
- Empowerment and efficiency
- Practice on the ground
- Professional guidance
- Political and organisational distortion
- A systemic problem
- Child protection revisited
- Shifting policy responses
- Biculturalism: lost in translation
- Iwi social services
- 6 Cycles of crisis and review
- Limits of the efficient production state
- Labour's social development agenda
- The Brown review and new directions
- Strategic responses to risk and overload
- Moral panic and populist politics
- Ontological insecurity: Maori mothers and Pakeha identity
- Green and White Papers
- Vulnerable children
- Social investment
- 'More effective social services' (NZPC, 2015)
- Targeting the expensive and irresponsible
- Quadrant D and future welfare liability
- Whanau Ora and commissioning