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Family Troubles?: Exploring Changes and Challenges in the Family Lives of Children and Young People [Kietas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Hardback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis: 240x172 mm, Not illustrated
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Apr-2013
  • Leidėjas: Policy Press
  • ISBN-10: 1447304438
  • ISBN-13: 9781447304432
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 320 pages, aukštis x plotis: 240x172 mm, Not illustrated
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Apr-2013
  • Leidėjas: Policy Press
  • ISBN-10: 1447304438
  • ISBN-13: 9781447304432
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
As the everyday family lives of children and young people come to be increasingly defined as matters of public policy and concern, it is important to raise the question of how we can understand the contested terrain between normal family troubles and troubled and troubling families. In this important, timely and thought-provoking publication, a wide range of contributors explore how troubles feature in normal families, and how the normal features in troubled families. Drawing on research on a wide range of substantive topics - including infant care, sibling conflict, divorce, disability, illness, migration and asylum-seeking, substance misuse, violence, kinship care, and forced marriage - the contributors aim to promote dialogue between researchers addressing mainstream family change and diversity in everyday lives, and those specialising in specific problems which prompt professional interventions. In tackling these contentious and difficult issues across a variety of topics, the book addresses a wide audience, including policy makers, service users and practitioners, as well as family studies scholars more generally who are interested in issues of family change.

Recenzijos

"A wealth of insightful essasys, the book is filled with careful reflection of hte process of change...in the everyday lives of children and young people." British Journal of Social Work "Whether you currently work within social work, health, education or another agency, there is something for everyone within this book." Child Abuse Review "This brilliant book provides a wealth of insights that make it essential reading for academics and students across the social sciences, and for policy makers and practitioners." Harry Ferguson, Professor of Social Work, University of Nottingham

Notes on contributors vi
Foreword xiii
Dorit Braun
Preface xv
1 Troubling normalities and normal family troubles: diversities, experiences and tensions
1(22)
Jane Ribbens McCarthy
Carol-Ann Hooper
Val Gillies
PART ONE APPROACHING FAMILY TROUBLES? CONTEXTS AND METHODOLOGIES
23(48)
Introduction to Part One
Jane Ribbens McCarthy
2 Cultural context, families and troubles
27(8)
Jill Korbin
3 Representing family troubles through the 20th century
35(10)
Janet Fink
4 The role of science in understanding family troubles
45(14)
Michael Rutter
5 Family troubles, methods trouble: qualitative research and the methodological divide
59(12)
Ara Francis
PART TWO WHOSE TROUBLE? CONTESTED DEFINITIONS AND PRACTICES
71(60)
Introduction to Part Two
Val Gillies
6 Disabled parents and normative family life: the obscuring of lived experiences of parents and children within policy and research accounts
75(10)
Harriet Clarke
Lindsay O'Dell
7 Normal problems or problem children? Parents and the micro-politics of deviance and disability
85(12)
Ara Francis
8 Troubled talk and talk about troubles: moral cultures of infant feeding in professional, policy and parenting discourses
97(10)
Helen Lomax
9 Children's non-conforming behaviour: personal trouble or public issue?
107(12)
Geraldine Brady
10 Revealing the lived reality of kinship care through children and young people's narratives: "It's not all nice, it's not all easy-going, it's a difficult journey to go on"
119(12)
Karin Cooper
PART THREE THE NORMAL, THE TROUBLING AND THE HARMFUL?
131(64)
Introduction to Part Three
Carol-Ann Hooper
11 Troubling loss? Children's experiences of major disruptions in family life
135(16)
Lynn Jamieson
Gill Highet
12 The permeating presence of past domestic and familial violence: "So like I'd never let anyone hit me but I've hit them, and I shouldn't have done"
151(12)
Dawn Mannay
13 Thinking about sociological work on personal and family life in the light of research on young people's experience of parental substance misuse
163(10)
Sarah Wilson
14 The trouble with siblings: some psychosocial thoughts about sisters, aggression and femininity
173(12)
Helen Lucey
15 Children and family transitions: contact and togetherness
185(10)
Hayley Davies
PART FOUR TROUBLES AND TRANSITIONS ACROSS SPACE AND CULTURE
195(62)
Introduction to Part Four
Jane Ribbens McCarthy
16 `Troubling' or `ordinary'? Children's views on migration and intergenerational ethnic identities
199(10)
Umut Erel
17 Colombian families dealing with parents' international migration
209(14)
Maria Claudia Duque-Paramo
18 Families left behind: unaccompanied young people seeking asylum in the UK
223(10)
Elaine Chase
June Statham
19 Young people's caring relations and transitions within families affected by HIV
233(12)
Ruth Evans
20 Estimating the prevalence of forced marriage in England
245(12)
Peter Keogh
Anne Kazimirski
Susan Purdon
Ruth Maisey
PART FIVE WORKING WITH FAMILIES
257(98)
Introduction to Part Five
Carol-Ann Hooper
21 European perspectives on parenting and family support
263(16)
Janet Boddy
22 What supports resilient coping among family members? A systemic practitioner's perspective
279(12)
Arlene Vetere
23 Troubled and troublesome teens: mothers' and professionals' understandings of parenting teenagers and teenage troubles
291(14)
Harriet Churchill
Karen Clarke
24 Contested family practices and moral reasoning: updating concepts for working with family-related social problems
305(10)
Hannele Forsberg
25 Working with fathers: risk or resource?
315(12)
Brid Featherstone
26 What is at stake in family troubles? Existential issues and value frameworks
327(28)
Jane Ribbens McCarthy
Index 355
Dr Jane Ribbens McCarthy is Reader in Family Studies, in the Centre for Citizenship, Identities and Governance (CCIG) at the Open University. Her research interests and publications focus on families and relationships, particularly children and young peoples family lives, including their experiences of bereavement and loss.



Dr Carol-Ann Hooper is Senior Lecturer in Social Policy at the University of York. She has worked in the overlapping fields of child protection and family support, gender and crime, and violence against women, for over 20 years.



Val Gillies is Research Professor in Social and Policy Studies at the Weeks Centre for Social and Policy Research, London South Bank University. Her research interests focus on family, parenting, social class, and marginalised children and young people, and she has published extensively in journals on these topics.