Rethinking Children's Rights: Attitudes in Contemporary Society: New Childhoods
Autor Dr Phil Jones, Dr Sue Welchen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 feb 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350001244
ISBN-10: 1350001244
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Childhoods
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350001244
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Ediția:2
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Childhoods
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
New case studies and activities involving research with young people have been included or updated to underpin and develop the key themes
Notă biografică
Phil Jones is Professor of Children's Rights and Wellbeing at IOE, UCL's Faculty of Education and Society, University College London, UK. He has published a number of books and articles including Exploring Education and Childhood: From Current Certainties to New Visions (2015) and Rethinking Childhood (2009) and has recently completed research for the Office of the Children's Commissioner for England on Children's Rights in Education.Sue Welch was formerly a Principal Lecturer and Course Leader in Childhood Studies at Leeds Metropolitan University, UK and has lectured at the University of York St John, UK. She is co-editor and contributor to Childhood: Services and Provision for Children (2008).
Cuprins
Introduction to New Childhoods Series Part I: Debates, Dilemmas and Challenges: The Background to Children's Rights 1. Introduction to Rethinking Children's Rights 2. Children's Rights: Definitions and Developments Part II: An Interdisciplinary Review of Recent Research and Scholarship 3. Children's Rights: Current Tensions, Debates and Research Part III: Implications for Children's Lives 4. Rights and the 'Child's Voice' 5. Rights and Decision Making 6. A Rights Perspective on Family Life7. Working with Children References Index
Recenzii
Welch and Jones have produced a much-needed book that highlights for practitioners the cultural, legal and political challenges - as well as opportunities - for promoting children's rights, by taking an open-eyed look at the necessity of understanding these rights within local context and culture. This book provides a roadmap of investigative questions that researchers and practitioners alike can use in navigating the complex and compelling domain of children's rights.
Ideal for those studying childhood at undergraduate and graduate level ... [Rethinking Children's Rights] explores attitudes towards, and experiences of, children's rights, highlighting the cultural, legal and political changes for practitioners ... Recommended reading.
The authors do an excellent job of moving beyond explaining children's rights in a narrow legalistic sense to describing what a children's right's perspective can offer.
The book is written in an interactive and easy-to-read style that would be accessible to anyone who works with children and is interested in learning more about children's rights...From a teaching perspective, one of the most useful features of the book is the inclusion in each chapter of text boxes listing activities that would be excellent starting points for class discussions, paper topics or essay exam questions...The book would be an appropriate text in advanced undergraduate or graduate seminars in a range of disciplines, including education, sociology, public policy, public health and child development...Overall, this book reads as an accessible, engaging tutorial in altering one's thinking and approach to interacting with children from a rights-based perspective. Readers are likely to be left with a better understanding of the controversies and dilemmas that arise when attempting to move from the concept of children's rights to implementing in practice children's rights in diverse domains within a society and in diverse societies around the world.
I was particularly impressed by the summaries of key research that the authors provide; this gives the reader a consistency of writing style, rather than the usual method of extended extracts from research that sometimes jars with the flow of the book...The strength of the book, and it is a considerable one, is that it is accessible and invites the reader to really challenge and explore the complexity of children's rights. The more students who engage in this book, the more informed and nuanced advocates of children's rights these students would become.
It is a gentle, persuasive and informative introduction to children's rights. Its approach is broadly Socratic. It is ideal as an introduction to the subject. I would hope that it is a book that will be read and studied, discussed and re-examined by young people and by those 'in charge' of them. Readers of this journal will appreciate the easy style of the book, the many examples given of theory, practice and research, and the clear presentation and insights it offers to those who teach the subject (and/or preach it)...What I like about this book in particular is that it offers a roadmap - I suppose now a sat nav - to navigate towards the progress in raising the status of children that readers of this journal seek. And for those of us who are teachers, at whatever level it offers activities for those we guide, and is consumer-friendly. It also highlights the research which students should read, giving them enough to whet appetites, whilst hoping they will seek out more. In short, thoroughly recommended as a straightforward introduction. I can see it being adopted in many courses.
Essential reading as much for old timers looking for fresh interpretations of problems wrestled with in the past as for newcomers to the topic... The book is divided into three sections. The first provides an introduction to children's rights, establishing the case for a 'rethink' and covering definitions and a short history of children's rights. The second provides a useful review of recent research and scholarship and the third considers in more detail the implications for children's lives in terms of rights and the 'child's voice', decision making, family life and, finally, the rights issues that arise for those working with children.
This is a clearly written introductory text to Children's Rights. It provides a very sound basis for undergraduate engagement with some dominant themes and tensions of rights. Each chapter is carefully constructed and scaffolded to support the navigation of different ideas and social constructions of rights.
Ideal for those studying childhood at undergraduate and graduate level ... [Rethinking Children's Rights] explores attitudes towards, and experiences of, children's rights, highlighting the cultural, legal and political changes for practitioners ... Recommended reading.
The authors do an excellent job of moving beyond explaining children's rights in a narrow legalistic sense to describing what a children's right's perspective can offer.
The book is written in an interactive and easy-to-read style that would be accessible to anyone who works with children and is interested in learning more about children's rights...From a teaching perspective, one of the most useful features of the book is the inclusion in each chapter of text boxes listing activities that would be excellent starting points for class discussions, paper topics or essay exam questions...The book would be an appropriate text in advanced undergraduate or graduate seminars in a range of disciplines, including education, sociology, public policy, public health and child development...Overall, this book reads as an accessible, engaging tutorial in altering one's thinking and approach to interacting with children from a rights-based perspective. Readers are likely to be left with a better understanding of the controversies and dilemmas that arise when attempting to move from the concept of children's rights to implementing in practice children's rights in diverse domains within a society and in diverse societies around the world.
I was particularly impressed by the summaries of key research that the authors provide; this gives the reader a consistency of writing style, rather than the usual method of extended extracts from research that sometimes jars with the flow of the book...The strength of the book, and it is a considerable one, is that it is accessible and invites the reader to really challenge and explore the complexity of children's rights. The more students who engage in this book, the more informed and nuanced advocates of children's rights these students would become.
It is a gentle, persuasive and informative introduction to children's rights. Its approach is broadly Socratic. It is ideal as an introduction to the subject. I would hope that it is a book that will be read and studied, discussed and re-examined by young people and by those 'in charge' of them. Readers of this journal will appreciate the easy style of the book, the many examples given of theory, practice and research, and the clear presentation and insights it offers to those who teach the subject (and/or preach it)...What I like about this book in particular is that it offers a roadmap - I suppose now a sat nav - to navigate towards the progress in raising the status of children that readers of this journal seek. And for those of us who are teachers, at whatever level it offers activities for those we guide, and is consumer-friendly. It also highlights the research which students should read, giving them enough to whet appetites, whilst hoping they will seek out more. In short, thoroughly recommended as a straightforward introduction. I can see it being adopted in many courses.
Essential reading as much for old timers looking for fresh interpretations of problems wrestled with in the past as for newcomers to the topic... The book is divided into three sections. The first provides an introduction to children's rights, establishing the case for a 'rethink' and covering definitions and a short history of children's rights. The second provides a useful review of recent research and scholarship and the third considers in more detail the implications for children's lives in terms of rights and the 'child's voice', decision making, family life and, finally, the rights issues that arise for those working with children.
This is a clearly written introductory text to Children's Rights. It provides a very sound basis for undergraduate engagement with some dominant themes and tensions of rights. Each chapter is carefully constructed and scaffolded to support the navigation of different ideas and social constructions of rights.