Does Every Child Matter?

Regular price €46.99
A01=Catherine A. Simon
A01=Stephen Ward
Author_Catherine A. Simon
Author_Stephen Ward
CACE
capital
Category=JNF
child protection policy
Child Welfare
Child Welfare Issues
Child Wellbeing
Children's Wellbeing
Dense
DIUS
ECM
ECM Outcome
education governance
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
extended
Extended Schools Initiative
Family Learning Sessions
Held
Hm Treasury
Holistic Approach
Information Sharing Index
Integrated Qualifications Framework
Makeup
management
matters
multi-agency collaboration
Multi-agency Working
new
Post-war
PSA
public
Public Administration
public sector management
restructuring welfare provision in UK
school
Sen
social
social policy analysis
start
sure
UNICEF
USA
welfare state reform
Working Families Tax Credit

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415495790
  • Weight: 270g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Jun 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Every Child Matters represents the most radical change to education and welfare provision in almost two decades. This book moves beyond a descriptive ‘how to’ framework to examine the underlying political and social aims of this policy agenda.

The authors’ analysis reveals that Every Child Matters represents the Government’s attempt to codify perceived risks in society and to formulate their responses. In doing so, children are made the strategic focus of much wider social policy reform, the effects of which are first felt in education. Does Every Child Matter? explores the ramifications of this along three key lines of analysis:

  • the restructuring of the state beyond its welfare functions
  • changes in governance and the creation of new binaries
  • a redefining of the education sector around the needs of the child.

This book provides a unique and insightful critique of Every Child Matters and its contribution to understandings of New Labour social policy. It locates the genesis of the policy in terms of its social, political and historical contexts and questions the validity of constructing social policy around issues of child welfare. Students, academics and researchers in education studies and education policy will find this book of great interest.

Catherine A. Simon is a Senior Lecturer in Education Studies at Bath Spa University.

Stephen Ward is Dean of the School of Education at Bath Spa University.