Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4936570 | Children and Youth Services Review | 2017 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
In France, the child protection system - as well as family-related policies in general - links specific interventions and schemes to the recognition of a particular situation: this is usually called the status-based approach. But in child protection, the status-based approach has severe limitations that may affect the quality of care. Piling up a number of statuses does not promote an overall vision of the child, and the evolving, dynamic nature of a child's development and history tends to disappear in a framework that relies heavily on ascertained, stable situations. Practitioners have started to develop tools to work with the children and families over time and in a more holistic manner, but these developments need to be mainstreamed and to be mirrored in administrative practices and at policy level to really take into account life trajectories.
Keywords
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Authors
Gilles Séraphin, Flora Bolter,