Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x5gtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-01T10:48:06.628Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Can child and family social work research really assist practice?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 February 2016

Extract

British social workers at the sharp end of foster care and social work practice have experienced a flood of official reports in recent years (Association of Directors of Social Services, 1997; Utting, 1997; Warren, 1997), mostly, though not exclusively, highlighting the problems of too few placements for an increasingly challenging number of children and young people. In addition, British and North American foster care research over the past twenty years has shown how children in public, including foster, care have been:

Type
Section Five: Looking forward – International and cross-cultural perspectives
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aldgate, J. (1998) ‘Measuring Outcomes in Family Support Services (a case study using respite care)’, Children and Society, 12, 185187.Google Scholar
Association of Directors of Social Services (1997) The Foster Care Market: A National Perspective, ADSS.Google Scholar
Berridge, D. (1997) Foster Care: A Research Review, HMSO.Google Scholar
Department of Health (1998) Quality Protects: Objectives for Social Services for Children, London.Google Scholar
Fisher, M., Marsh, P., Phillips, D. & Sainsbury, E. (1986) In and Out of Care: the experiences of children, parents and social workers, London, Batsford.Google Scholar
Herczog, M. (1998) ‘Assessing Child Welfare Outcomes in Central and Eastern Europe’, Children and Society, 12, 223227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, H., Clark, R., Kufeldt, K. & Norman, M. (1998) ‘Looking After Children: Assessing Outcomes in Child Care – the Experience of Implementation’, Children and Society, 12, 198209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leahy, R., Little, C., Mondy, L. & Nixon, D. (1999) ‘What makes good outcomes for children in foster care?’, Children Australia, 24, 2, 49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lord, J. (1998) Working with Independent Fostering Agencies: Guidance for Local Authorities in England and Wales, BAAF, London.Google Scholar
National Foster Care Association (1999a) UK National Standards for Foster Care, National Foster Care Association.Google Scholar
National Foster Care Association (1999b) The UK Joint Working Party on Foster Care, National Foster Care Association.Google Scholar
Rowe, J., Hundleby, M., and Garneti, L. (1989). Child Care Now: a survey of placement patterns London BAAF.Google Scholar
Sellick, C. & Thoburn, J. (1996) What Works in Family Placement! Barkingside, Barnardos.Google Scholar
Stone, J. (1995) Making Positive Moves, Developing Short Term Fostering Services, BAAF.Google Scholar
Triseliotis, J. (1989) ‘Foster Care Outcomes: A Review of Key Research Findings’, Adoption and Fostering, 13, 3, 516.Google Scholar
Triseliotis, J., Sellick, C. & Short, R. (1995) Foster Care Theory and Practice, First Association Books.Google Scholar
Utting, W. (1997) People Like Us: A Report on the Safety of Children Living Away from Home, Department of Health.Google Scholar
Ward, H. (1996) ‘Constructing and Implementing Measures to Assess the Outcomes of Looking After Children Away From Home’, in Hill, M. & Aldgate, J. (eds), Child Welfare Services: Developments in Law, Policy, Pracitice and Research, London, Jessica Kingsley Publishers.Google Scholar
Warren, D. (1997) Foster Care in Crisis: A Call to Professionalise the Forgotten Service, National Foster Care Association.Google Scholar
Waterhouse, S. (1997) The organisation of fostering services: a study of the arrangements for delivery of fostering services in England, London, National Foster Care Association.Google Scholar
Waterhouse, S. & Brocklesby, E. (in press) Placement Choices for Children in Temporary Foster Care, National Foster Care Association.Google Scholar