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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.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Hyslop, Ian Kelvin (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Bristol, UK : Policy Press, 2022.
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