Browsing by Person "Featherstone, Brid"
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Item Exploring inequities in child welfare and child protection services: Explaining the 'inverse intervention law'(Elsevier, 2015-07-31) Bywaters, Paul; Brady, Geraldine; Sparks, Tim; Bos, Elizabeth; Bunting, Lisa; Daniel, Brigid; Featherstone, Brid; Morris, Kate; Scourfield, JonathanItem Inequalities in English child protection practice under austerity: A universal challenge?(Wiley, 2017-07-17) Bywaters, Paul; Brady, Geraldine; Bunting, Lisa; Daniel, Brigid; Featherstone, Brid; Jones, Chantel; Morris, Kate; Scourfield, Jonathan; Sparks, Tim; Webb, CalumItem Poverty, inequality, child abuse and neglect: Changing the conversation across the UK in child protection?(Elsevier, 2017-06-16) Featherstone, Brid; Morris, Kate; Daniel, Brigid; Bywaters, Paul; Brady, Geraldine; Bunting, Lisa; Mason, Will; Mirza, NughmanaItem Social work, poverty, and child welfare interventions(Wiley-Blackwell, 2018-01-17) Morris, Kate; Mason, Will; Bywaters, Paul; Featherstone, Brid; Daniel, Brigid; Brady, Geraldine; Bunting, Lisa; Hooper, Jade; Mirza, Nughmana; Scourfield, Jonathan; Webb, Calum; ** Funder: Nuffield Foundation; Grant num: Child Welfare Inequalities; FundRef: 10.13039/501100000279The relationship between children's material circumstances and child abuse and neglect raises a series of questions for policy, practice, and practitioners. Children and families in poverty are significantly more likely to be the subject of state intervention. This article, based on a unique mixed‐methods study of social work interventions and the influence of poverty, highlights a narrative from practitioners that argues that, as many poor families do not harm their children, it is stigmatizing to discuss a link between poverty and child abuse and neglect. The data reveal that poverty has become invisible in practice, in part justified by avoiding stigma but also because of a lack of up‐to‐date research knowledge and investment by some social workers in an “underclass” discourse. We argue, in light of the evidence that poverty is a contributory factor in the risk of harm, that it is vital that social work engages with the evidence and in critical reflection about intervening in the context of poverty. We identify the need for fresh approaches to the harms children and families face in order to support practices that engage confidently with the consequences of poverty and deprivation.Item Towards full integration of quantitative and qualitative methods in case study research: Insights from investigating child welfare inequalities(SAGE, 2019-07-01) Mason, Will; Morris, Kate; Webb, Calum; Daniel, Brigid; Featherstone, Brid; Bywaters, Paul; Mirza, Nughmana; Hooper, Jade; Brady, Geraldine; Bunting, Lisa; Scourfield, JonathanDelineation of the full integration of quantitative and qualitative methods throughout all stages of multisite mixed methods case study projects remains a gap in the methodological literature. This article offers advances to the field of mixed methods by detailing the application and integration of mixed methods throughout all stages of one such project; a study of child welfare inequalities. By offering a critical discussion of site selection and the management of confirmatory, expansionary and discordant data, this article contributes to the limited body of mixed methods exemplars specific to this field. We propose that our mixed methods approach provided distinctive insights into a complex social problem, offering expanded understandings of the relationship between poverty, child abuse and neglect.Item Trends in Child Protection Across the UK: A Comparative Analysis(OUP, 2017-10-17) Bunting, Lisa; McCartan, Claire; McGhee, Janice; Bywaters, Paul; Daniel, Brigid; Featherstone, Brid; Slater, TomAlthough numerous international studies point to large variations in child welfare interventions, comparative analysis has tended to focus either solely on England or the UK as a whole, discounting differences across the four UK countries. This paper compares trends in national statistics relating to the operation of child protection systems across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland between 2004/05 and 2013/14. Despite a number of legislative, operational and definitional differences between nations, a number of trends are apparent. All systems show an increasing orientation towards child protection as evidenced by rising rates of child protection investigation and children subject to child protection planning. Increasingly, this relates to emotional abuse and involves younger children aged from birth to four years. However, the way cases are processed can differ, with only one in ten referrals resulting in a child protection investigation in Northern Ireland compared to one in five in England. Potential reasons for these differences are discussed and questions raised as to why, more than a quarter-century after the introduction of the 1989 Children Act, we still have no clear picture of the circumstances of families who come into contact with social services or the services provided to support them