Measuring Better Care: Building the Evidence to Inform Policy and Practice Around Children’s Care

Mark Canavera & Florence Martin - Global Social Welfare

This editorial piece from the Journal of Global Social Welfare introduces the journal's special issue on measuring children’s care arrangements. “The wide-ranging gaps in current understanding and knowledge related to trends and patterns in children’s care and the provision of alternative care, in both formal and informal settings, make it difficult to know what programs and approaches will be most effective in realizing these ideals,” says the editorial. “To that end, this special issue of Global Social Welfare represents an effort to present state-of-the-art learning about how to measure issues related to children’s care in a way that informs more effective policies and programs. The issue grows out of a 2014 symposium co-hosted by the Better Care Network and the CPC Learning Network at New York University’s McSilver Institute for Poverty Policy and Research, an event that convened a number of leading academics, policymakers, and practitioners involved in the development or implementation of key initiatives to better measure issues of children’s care at country, regional, and international levels.”

Other articles in this special issue include:

Section 1:  Measuring trends in families and children’s care and living arrangements

Section 2: Determining the effectiveness of policies and programs

Section 3: Improving learning about children in alternative care