Child Care and Protection Policies

Child care and protection policies regulate the care of children, including the type of support and assistance to be offered, good practice guidelines for the implementation of services, standards for care, and adequate provisions for implementation. They relate to the care a child receives at and away from home.

Displaying 561 - 570 of 1775

Frank Ainsworth and Patricia Hansen - Children Australia,

This article reviews developments in the Australian NSW child protection system which aim to reduce the number of children in state care.

Better Care Network,

This country care review includes the care-related Concluding Observations adopted by the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

Jennifer Beard, , Anne Skalicky, Busisiwe Nkosi, Tom Zhuwau, Mandisa Cakwe, Jonathon Simon, Mary Bachman DeSilva - Global Health Promotion,

This narrative documents the experience of researchers with the objective of documenting lessons learned in the Amajuba Child Health and Wellbeing Research Project, a collaboration between researchers from two universities and a community in South Africa which measured the impact of orphaning due to HIV/AIDS on South African households between 2004 and 2007.

Hanson, Lucy and Henderson, Gillian and Kurlus, Indiya - Child and Family Social Work,

This paper outlines key findings from the first comprehensive study of permanence planning in Scotland.

Jeremy Sammut - Centre for Independent Studies,

This paper will examine recent initiatives to boost adoptions in New South Wales (NSW) and a way to roll out the core of these reforms nationally.

Vivek S. Sankaran - University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository,

This paper describes the experiences of parents with child welfare cases in family court. The paper argues the need to build a court process to support parents and keep families together.

Maryse Bournel-Bosson, Michèle Grossen - Learning, Culture and Social Interaction,

This study explores how the social workers and the families cope with the paradox of constrained help and enter into some form of collaboration.

Habibie Bte Hj Ibrahim, Norhamidah Jarimal - Malaysian Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities,

This paper is based on literature review on the legal, political and social context of Malaysia regarding child welfare and social work.

Ministry of Cults and Religion, Kingdom of Cambodia,

This Wat Sangkahak Komar policy (or Child Safeguarding Policy) is part of the comprehensive mechanism within pagodas in Cambodia to respond to suspected and reported cases of violence against or abuse of children.

Kathleen B. Simon - Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems,

his Note explores how the standard practice of removing a child without prior judicial authorization has quietly contributed to a civil rights crisis by enabling racial bias to go unchecked in the placement decision-making process.