Forward. Olive Stevenson. Introduction. Brigid Daniel & Julie Taylor. 1. The Social and Cultural Context of Neglect. Nick Spencer, University of Warwick and Norma Baldwin, University of Dundee. 2. Evidence-based Practice in Child Neglect: Issues for Consideration. David Gough, University of London. 3. The Emotional Causes and Consequences of Neglect. Brian Minty, University of Manchester. 4. Assessment of Neglect: A Joint Operational Approach. Om Prakash Svrivastava, Edwin Lobo Child Development Centre, Luton. 5. Interdisciplinary Issues in Neglect. Olive Stevenson. 6. Neglect: No Monopoly on Expertise. Helen Buckley, University of Dublin. 7. Is this Child Neglect? The Impact of Differences in Perception of Child Neglect on Social Work Practice. Jan Horwath, University of Sheffield. 8. Neglect: Learning the Lessons from Serious Case Reviews. Renuka Jeyaraja Dent and Christine Cocker, Bridge Child Care Development Service, London. 9. What is Weight Faltering ('Failure to Thrive') and When Does it Become a Child Protection Issue? Charlotte Wright, PEACH Unit, Glasgow. 10. The Theoretical and Practical Issues in Attachment and Neglect: The Case of Very Low Birth Weight Infants. Gill Watson and Julie Taylor, University of Dundee.
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Description
This book is a very welcome addition to the Best Practice in Working with Children series. It is a mine of information and importantly draws on the most up to date research as well as practice knowledge... The sequence of the chapters allows the reader to cover the general issues, the theoretical and evidential grounding, the implications for health and social care and finally messages for practice. It is the capacity of the contributors to illustrate their text with both complex research information and case studies that makes this book for me so valuable and accessible. It would be invidious to select any one chapter as the best, there are so many! I really enjoyed them all and the topical issue of whether children from substance abusing families should be removed from home will benefit from the debates within this book. It provides a measured approach to what has become a very emotive topic... Certainly a book well worth reading and referring back to time and time again.