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Re-Thinking Children's Care Book
Children's care in the 21st century is increasingly a public issue as well as parents' private concern. A limited vision of children as the responsibility of mothers held sway in Britain long after mothers joined the workforce. Formal childcare is now growing but in the context of care work continuing to be low qualified and low status. A dearth of care looms large as Britain rapidly turns into an overworked society. This critically oriented book draws on a range of key empirical studies carried out in a variety of care contexts. It examines care from the perspectives of children, parents and care workers. It also takes an historical perspective. The discussion is situated in an analysis of economic, social and political change, from modernity to late modernity. It focuses on four key issues: the conceptualization of care; how care translates its public policy; the nature of the care relationship; and how care might be transformed in the future. Rethinking Children's Care will be of interest to students of childhood studies, the sociology of childhood and child welfare. It is also directly relevant to policy makers, trainers and researchers as well as practitioners involved in children's care.Read More
from£N/A | RRP: * Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £N/A
- 0335209882
- 9780335209880
- Julia Brannen, Peter Moss
- 1 November 2002
- Open University Press
- Hardcover (Book)
- 224
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