Who Said Children Matter, Anyway? Family Preservation and Child Protection - Conflicting Agendas for Practicioners

Authors

  • David Millen Childen 's Aid Society of Ottawa-Carleton, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Dilemmas relating to child protection and family preservation were the focus of a leadership forum at the 1993 Trieschman Conference held in March 1993 at Cambridge, Mass. The author, a participant at the forum, highlights the need for balance between the advocates of the "interventionist" approach which leaves considerable discretion in the hands of child welfare workers and the courts, and the supporters of the "family autonomy" approach which suggests that parents should be left alone to raise their children unless they fail to meet clearly defined mini­mum standards of care. The political rhetoric and will for change, our commitment to provide for the next generation and the dangers associated with "bandwagonism" in child welfare go a long way in determining the extent to which children truly matter in our society!

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Published

1994-03-01

How to Cite

Millen, D. . (1994). Who Said Children Matter, Anyway? Family Preservation and Child Protection - Conflicting Agendas for Practicioners. Journal of Child and Youth Care Work, 9, 6–12. Retrieved from https://acycpjournal.pitt.edu/ojs/jcycw/article/view/213

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Articles