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Safeguarding Young People Beyond the Family Home
EPDF and EPUB available Open Access under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. During adolescence, young people are exposed to a range of risks beyond their family homes including sexual and criminal exploitation, peer-on-peer abuse and gang-related violence. However, it has only been over the past two decades that the critical safeguarding implications of these harms have started to be recognised. Social care organisations are increasingly experimenting with new approaches but continue to experience challenges in supporting affected young people and their families. This book analyses the results of the first rapid evidence assessment of social care organisations’ responses to risks and harms outside the home across 10 countries. The authors highlight key areas for service development, give insights into how these risks and harms can be understood, and consider wider implications for policy and practice.
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
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One The emerging concept of extra-familial risks and harms
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Introduction
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EFRH: what is included?
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From youth justice to welfare: the emergent policy response in the UK
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Adopting a welfare-based approach to EFRH: shared global challenges but divergent responses
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Balancing rights to protection and autonomy
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Balancing welfare and criminal justice paradigms
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Individualised or restrictive intervention models
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Charting a way forward: the contribution of this book
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Two A framework for analysing the evidence
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Introduction
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Identifying relevant literature
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Analysing and categorising
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Building a thematic framework
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Characteristics of effective or promising social care responses
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Clustering types of harm
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A note on the limitations of this review
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Moving forward
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Three Building relationships
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Introduction
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Building trusted relationships between young people and professionals
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Building working alliances with young people, parents and carers
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Developing community and wider networks of relational support
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Conclusion
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Four Improving interagency collaboration
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Introduction
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Partnerships, processes and protocols
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Challenges of interagency working: inconsistency and discord
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Shared activities or shared goals?
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Building a common purpose
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Five Changing contexts of harm
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Introduction
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Responding to peer, school, and community contexts
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Struggling to address structural drivers
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The limitations of individualised approaches
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Conclusion: the need for system change
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Six Addressing the specific dynamics of risk and harm
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Introduction
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Responding beyond parenting or family-focused intervention
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Rebalancing towards welfare-oriented system responses
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Recognising and responding to the ‘gains’ of EFRH
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Conclusion: fit for purpose?
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Seven A youth-centred paradigm
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Introduction
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Collaborative and choice-focused support
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Intersecting identities, needs and experiences
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Trauma-informed practices
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From ‘doing to’ to ‘working with’
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Eight A framework for designing and improving responses
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Introduction
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Using contextual and relational interventions as reinforcing approaches to intervention
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Re-envisioning the social work role and definitions of vulnerability
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Mitigating the impact of structural drivers on social care responses
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A framework for designing systems and improving responses to EFRH
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Nine New directions for the UK and beyond
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Introduction
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Looking back, moving forward
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Evidence problems
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The adolescence ‘problem’
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System and service problems
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Applying principles of ethical innovation to improving and transforming responses
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Incorporating human rights principles into service responses
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Transforming systems and practices in line with social justice concerns
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Prioritising young people’s voices
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- Glossary
- References
- Index
- 出版地 : 英國
- 語言 : 英文
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