BJSW Advance Access published online on July 11, 2005
British Journal of Social Work, doi:10.1093/bjsw/bch224
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. The state removes children from failed parents to give them a better experience of parenting. This article examines the role that the state plays as parent to young mothers in care and grandparent to their children, drawing on a small-scale study undertaken in western Canada using grounded theory methodology. The findings were bleak: the state as parent and grandparent also fails these children. We consider why this is the case and make suggestions for ways forward by critiquing the ideology of familialism that underpins the states punitive approach to these young mothers and their children. We also call for policies and a practice that enable practitioners to address structural inequalities such as poverty and racism alongside the capacity to respond to the personal needs of the young women and their children as young people with dignity and rights.
Article
Endangered Children: Experiencing and Surviving the State as Failed Parent and Grandparent
Lena Dominelli, E-mail: ld{at}socsci.soton.ac.uk
![]()
Abstract ![]()
CiteULike
Connotea
Del.icio.us What's this?