Child Guidance Centres in Japan

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A01=Michael Rivera King
Acceptance Meeting
adoption
Alternative Care
Alternative Care System
Author_Michael Rivera King
Category=JKS
child abuse
Child Guidance Centre
child guidance centres
child protection policy
child welfare
Child Welfare Act
Children Entering Foster Care
Children in Japan
CWI
decision-making in child removal Japan
Entered Foster Care
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic social work
Family-bond
Foster Care
Foster Care Placements
Foster Care Service Providers
Foster Care Services
foster parenting practices
Foster Parents
institutional care Japan
Japanese family
Japanese social welfare
Japanese studies
Kinship Foster Parents
Koseki System
Long Term Foster Care
MHLW
regional policy variation
Regional variation
social policy in Japan
social services in Japan
social work
SOS Child's Village
SOS Child’s Village
Specialist Foster Care
Specialist Foster Parent
Street Level Bureaucrat Literature
Street Level Bureaucrats
Temporary Care
UN
Welfare Institutions

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367566920
  • Weight: 403g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Apr 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In contemporary Japan, 85% of children in alternative care remain housed in large welfare institutions, as opposed to family-based foster care. This publication examines how Japan has been isolated from global discourse on alternative care, urging a shift in social work and alternative care policies.

As the first ethnographic account from inside child guidance centres, it makes a key contribution towards understanding the closed world of Japan’s social services; including the decision-making processes by which a child is removed from the family and placed into care. In addition, regional variation in policy implementation for alternative care is outlined, with reference to detailed case studies and a discussion around organisational cultures of the child guidance centres. Where foster care is constructed as anything other than professional, it is often seen as a threat to the child’s family-bond with their natal parent and therefore not used. Child Guidance Centres in Japan destabilises this construction of the family-bond as singular and discrete, highlighting new practices in alternative care.

Child Guidance Centres in Japan: Alternative Care and the Family will be a vital resource for students, scholars of social work and Japanese studies, as well as practitioners and lobbyists involved in alternative care.

Michael Rivera King completed his doctorate in Social Policy at the University of Oxford. His research interests centre on Japan’s alternative care system and the children and care-leavers whose lives are touched by this. Michael is the CEO of Ashinaga Association in the UK, a registered charity (number 1183750) promoting international access to higher education in the UK.

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