Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Law, social policy and practice
- Social policy concerns areas such as;
health, education, material needs,
housing, transport, income and social
care
- Professor Pete Alcock in LG10
mentions adressing our
welfare and wellbeing is
not just the Governments
or states role
- Many other
organisations
and agencies
are involved
from all sectors
(Public, private
and voluntary)
- For example, NHS hosptials,
private resisdential care
homes and charitys such as
the NSPCC or Barnados
- Rights frameworks (such as the UNCRC) and
legislation (such as Human Rights legislation) have
worked within policies since the 1980s to address
inequalities and discrimination, working towards
creating a more inclusive society. These have
created new non-governmental organisations
which scrutinise law and policy, such as the
Children's commissioner.
- Equality of educational and employment
opportunitys, Promoting ‘social inclusion’,
Children’s rights and early intervention
- A critial understanding of social
policy is knowledge that can help
practitioners assess the work
they are engadged in.
- The web of relationships surrounding a
child (family, community, society) and how
things are resourced for and around
children, are to a large extent, the result of
social policy
- Pam Foley's chapter "Public policy, children
and young people" highlights there needs to be
a balance between judging whether families
need state provisions and to what extent is
their health and wellbeing their own
responsbility
- The media also plays a big
part in the movement of social
policy
- For example the social policy which affects
private and public lives, such as the labelling
of subjective terms such as "good childhood"
and "hard working families"
- This chapter also argues that policy
can be shaped by the "real world"
- Sure start centres were designed by the
Labour government provide free childcare,
family support, and advice services for families
with children under the age of five years old.
Initially the sure start centres were designs to
cater for families from poverty stricken areas,
who couldn't afford childcare otherwise.
Although these centres were set up in the most
deprived areas, they were not always
accessible or known about by the
disadvantaged families they were aimed for.
- Working in partnerships with parents and communities was
seen as important to promote engagement with early years’
services, to reduce stigma and to ensure services are
responsive to local needs and communities
- Knowledge of the law can
be empowering for both
practitioners and the
families they work with
- You are able to give appropiate practical advice and
support (or how to get advice) to those you work. Such as
legal options, and the different consequences of each
option
- The law lays down the miniunm standards that those who provide
services must adhere to, and it specifies the safegaurds required
for children living away from home
- This ensures that users of particular
services can be assured that certain
standards will be met
- Plus those that provide a service or
who are resposible for its provision
know what their legal obligations are
- When determing whether or not to make an order in any
court proceedings involving children, the child's welfare is
the court's paramount consideration
- Example of law concerning children is
"The Children's ACT 1989"
- The case of Kimberly and
David illustrates the complex
relationships that define "family"
in the modern world. In this case
study the court had to decide
whether or not the children
should undergo DNA testing
and to weather or not the
children should have contact
with David taking into account
the results of the DNA test.
- These issues would normally
come under parental
responsibility, but if they are
unable to agree like Kimberly and
David the law allows the court to
decide
- In the UK and Eire law comes from
the Government, the courts and
international treaties.
- The process of creating
law has many strands,
influenced by case law
(made by judges) and
international and European
laws or secondary
legislation
- The law grants rights and
responsibilites and it has to
balance competing and
divergent rights which may
change and develop over
time
- In work with
children and young
people, the law will
shape, control and
inform practice in a
number of ways
- For example, the way laws grants
rights and freedoms to individuals
- The parents of Jodie and Mary conjoined twins,
were told that they needed to separate the
twins in order for Jodie to survive. Mary was
relying on Jodie's heart for life and without
separation Jodie's heart would eventually give
up and they would both die however with
separation Jodie had a good chance of life but
sadly Mary would not be able to survive
- The parents expressed their
wish they did not want the
children separated based on
their religious views, the court
overrode their wishes and the
twins were separated resulting
in Mary passed away in Jodie
living
- This case represents how the
children's rights were more
significance than the rights of the
parents and the court was able to
override their wishes based on a
better outcome for one of the
children
- Cases like this very controversial
and people have mixed views on
whether the court or the parents
should be making these kind of
decisions. Previously
approximately 30 or more years
ago the courts would have
probably favoured the parents
autonomy, but due to recent
changes in social policy the right
of the child was favoured over the
right of the parents.
- The law affects many aspects
of our daily personal and
professional lives. For example
as seen in the learning guide
law will be evident in various
different situations whether it is
obvious or not. Such as, the
legal drinking age, the criminal
offence of graffiti, the legal age
to drive, the legal requirement
that all children between the
ages of five and 16 must attend
full-time education
- Everybody will have different
perceptions about law, some positive
some negative. These opinions will be
based on personal experiences of facing
the law and people's general perception
based on various different influences
such as society and the media.
- Criminal law deals with crimes that were
investigated by the police and Crown
Prosecution Service is on the harvest the
state. If you are convicted of a crime there are
various punishments such as fines
imprisonments community orders or the
requirement to attend training or treatment
program. Before you can be convicted there
must be evidence stating that you are guilty
“beyond a reasonable doubt”. This is called
the standard of proof. Judges jewellery and
magistrates decide whether cases are guilty
or not
- Civil law concerns cases involving
disputes between individuals, such as
where there is a court order because
two parties cannot agree and therefore
the court decides on the balance of
probabilities rather than guilty or not
guilty. Examples of civil cases could be
disputes between parents, housing
associations, or arguments with
neighbours
- Some young-people are perceived as
dangerous, involved in criminal gangs
and anti-social behavior which is often
the image created in the media
especially with the recent rise in gun
and knife crime.
- There will always be incosistentys in
people's interpretation of the law depending
on their individual knowledeges,
experiences, beliefs and values
- All practioners working with children must
understand the law to be able to use it
effectively. Different practioners will have
different understandings on the law and to
what extent they must utilise it. They must
also understand that young-people are all
different and cannot be judged purley on their
age as each child will develop and
understand the law in different ways.
- For example a police officer who believes
young-people are out of control and
dangerous will probably inforce the law
stronger than a teacher or someone that
knows them in another practice setting.
- There are many inequalities in youth
justice such as the over
representation of young black males in
prision, this could make practioners
behaviour differenty when
encountering black youth because of
the preconceived ideas they have
- In the clip "They’re all the same" Young people
describe for themselves their feelings that they’re
always viewed with suspicion. -The clip showed
many different images of teenagers that felt adults in
society always judged them and made them feel
guilty for things they had not even done. This was
evident throughout the clips especially from the
children in minority groups such as black and
Asian's. The children showed how they felt excluded
and treated differently just because of the types of
clothes they were wearing and their age