Information For...toggle


Visit the Campaign for Social Sciences website

E-Newsletter Sign Up

Highlights & Special Offers


Special offer:
The Conservative Party
and social policy

£10 for May only

The Conservative Party and social policy cover

 With the recent focus on Margaret Thatcher’s legacy, this month we are offering The Conservative Party and social policy for just £10. Order your copy here.

 

Selected e-books
now just £6.99

Buy our most popular e-books at the special price of (around) £6.99, including Injustice, Democracy under attack and Hidden Stories of the Stephen Lawrence Inquiry.


New! Policy Press Bytes

Policy Press Bytes health inequalities cover

All three Policy Press Bytes from Danny Dorling's Unequal health are now available. Policy Press Bytes give you tasters of our most exciting titles on your e-book reader for just £1.99. Find out more here...

 

2013 Spring catalogue out now

Spring 2013 catalogue cover

Click on the cover to download a pdf (4.5MB) or request a print copy from tpp-marketing@bristol.ac.uk.

 

facebook logo    youtube logo   Twitter logo

 

Latest News

Exploring concepts of child well-being
Implications for children's services

Author/Editor(s):
Nick Axford
Format:
Paperback, 272 pages, 240 x 172 mm
ISBN
9781447305859
Published:
29 Jun 2012
Series:
Studies in Poverty, Inequality and Social Exclusion series

£19.99 - List price: £24.99 You save: £5.00

Add this title to your basket

Own this title? Review it!

North America customers can order this book here from the University of Chicago Press.

"
Axford has succeeded in providing research that will better equip staff to make assessments with finesse and formulate strategies to suit."
Adoption & Fostering
"This book moves effortlessly and clearly from ideas about well-being, through their measurement, to policy proposals. It is essential reading for those concerned with children's well-being, but I hope that its message will attract a wider audience."
Ian Gough, Professor of Social Policy, University of Bath
"Children's needs, rights, material resources, quality of life and inclusion do not identify the same target groups, and they call forth different 'service styles'. In a rigorous, scholarly yet readable way, the author casts light on the differences between these bases for official intervention in children's lives."
Bill Jordan, Professor of Social Policy, University of Plymouth and University of Huddersfield
"This book brings to life established as well as new ideas about child well-being. More importantly, it explains the consequences of adopting one perspective over another. Nick Axford’s investigation is essential reading for those involved in designing, implementing and evaluating services for children."
Jonathan Bradshaw, Professor of Social Policy, University of York

About This Book

Policy reforms to children's services in the UK and elsewhere encourage a greater focus on outcomes defined in terms of child well-being. Yet for this to happen, we need not only a better understanding of what child well-being is and how services can improve it, but also the ability to measure child well-being in order to evaluate success. This book investigates the main approaches to conceptualising child well-being, applies them to the child population using household survey and agency audit data, then considers the implications for children's services. The author: provides a clear conceptual understanding of five perspectives on well-being: need, rights, poverty, quality of life and social exclusion demonstrates the value of each perspective charts levels of child well-being in an inner-London community, including violated rights and social exclusion sets out the features that children's services must have if they are to improve child well-being defined in these terms This book should be read by everyone involved in developing, implementing and evaluating children's services, including researchers, policy makers and practitioners.

Author Biography

Nick Axford is a Researcher at Dartington Social Research Unit, UK. He has worked on numerous projects to measure child well-being in service and community contexts and then use the results to design new services.

Contents

Introduction
Part one: Defining and measuring the concepts: Need
Rights
Poverty
Quality of life
Social exclusion
Relationships between the concepts
Part two: The measures applied to children: Prevalence rates and distinguishing features
Relationships between the conditions
Part three: Implications for children's services: Matching conditions and service styles
Developing congruent children's services
Conclusions.


 

Customers in Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei must order from their local distributor