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Family Support: Direction from Diversity

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The contributors to this topical volume explore the role of family support in promoting the welfare of children and their families. They show how children can be supported in the development of their full potential despite adverse experiences. Family support enables children to access the variety of resources available to them in the multiplicity of contexts in which they live. This book integrates concepts and experiences from an international perspective, different levels of analysis (society, community and family) and different loci of intervention (education, social services and local government). Specific areas covered include: principles of family and social support; social networks and social change in the family and the community; reciprocal; support between families,schools and the community; restoring the balance of control between parents and children; supporting young people who misuse drugs. ''Family Support'' presents current knowledge about family support and sets out directions for future developments in thinking and service provision. It shows how an understanding of the complexity and potential of family support can inform and enrich the work of educators, professionals, service providers, policy makers and academics.
Family support - issues and prospects, Robbie Gilligan; communities family support and social change, Graham Crow, Graham Allan; social pedagogical family help in Germany - new wine in old vessels or new vessels for old wine? Joachim Wieler; children in control - helping parents restore the balance, Martin Herbert; social support principles for strengthening families - messages from America, Carolyn E. Cutrona; refocusing project work with adolescents towards a family support paradigm, John Canavan, Pat Dolan; drug prevention - turning towards family support, Saoirse Nic Ghabbainn, Fiona Walshe; developing reciprocal support among families, communities and schools - the Irish experience, Sandra Ryan; creating municipal structures for family support in a Danish city, Peter Steen; emerging agendas for family support, John Pinkerton.
There is much here to interest both the practitioner and academic in reminding us that personal action is important, whether at the informal level or under the aegis of the state and that through intervention, it is possible to make a difference.
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