Understanding Children's Rights
A Guide to Law, Policy and Practice
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 5. January 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
176 pages
978-1-138-18429-9 (ISBN)
Description
What are children's rights and where do they come from? Why is it necessary for children and young people to have their rights defined? What difficulties do practitioners face in developing a rights based approach to their daily work with children, young people and their families? What can children and young people tell us about their experiences and perspectives regarding rights?
This milestone text by a multidisciplinary author team offers an accessible and conceptually coherent guide to the theory and practice of children's rights, grounded in extensive research. It explains the provisions of the United Nations Convention for the Rights of the Child; identifies developments in legislation and policy; and explores the tensions and opportunities inherent in applying a rights based approach in a range of contexts, including:
Education
Child protection and family support
Kinship care, fostering and residential care
Mental, physical and sexual health
Leisure and play
Youth justice
New risks including human trafficking, child sexual exploitation and online abuse.
Rich in insight from both young peoples' and professionals' experiences, the book explores how a children's rights perspective can be applied in combination with other professional discourses including early intervention and prevention; risk assessment; evidence based practice; and relationship based practice. It considers children's participation in decision-making and the importance of effective monitoring and coordination in practice. Timely and wide-ranging, this book is essential reading for students and practitioners across the fields of education, health and social care.
This milestone text by a multidisciplinary author team offers an accessible and conceptually coherent guide to the theory and practice of children's rights, grounded in extensive research. It explains the provisions of the United Nations Convention for the Rights of the Child; identifies developments in legislation and policy; and explores the tensions and opportunities inherent in applying a rights based approach in a range of contexts, including:
Education
Child protection and family support
Kinship care, fostering and residential care
Mental, physical and sexual health
Leisure and play
Youth justice
New risks including human trafficking, child sexual exploitation and online abuse.
Rich in insight from both young peoples' and professionals' experiences, the book explores how a children's rights perspective can be applied in combination with other professional discourses including early intervention and prevention; risk assessment; evidence based practice; and relationship based practice. It considers children's participation in decision-making and the importance of effective monitoring and coordination in practice. Timely and wide-ranging, this book is essential reading for students and practitioners across the fields of education, health and social care.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 246 mm
Width: 174 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-138-18429-9 (9781138184299)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Dr Karen Winter is a Lecturer in Social Work at Queens University Belfast, with extensive experience of teaching at undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral research levels. Prior to this, she worked as a qualified social worker and a team manager in family and childcare. She has also worked as a Guardian ad Litem. She has researched and published extensively.
Dr Bronagh Byrne is a Lecturer in Social Policy at Queen's University Belfast. She previously worked as a Children's Rights Research Fellow at Queen's and as a researcher for the Centre on Human Rights for People with Disabilities at Disability Action, Belfast.
Dr Katrina Lloyd is a Lecturer in Education at Queens University Belfast. Her main research interest is in children's wellbeing and she has many years' experience as a quantitative research analyst. She has taught students at undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral research levels.
Dr Bronagh Byrne is a Lecturer in Social Policy at Queen's University Belfast. She previously worked as a Children's Rights Research Fellow at Queen's and as a researcher for the Centre on Human Rights for People with Disabilities at Disability Action, Belfast.
Dr Katrina Lloyd is a Lecturer in Education at Queens University Belfast. Her main research interest is in children's wellbeing and she has many years' experience as a quantitative research analyst. She has taught students at undergraduate, postgraduate and doctoral research levels.
Content
1. A Child Rights Based Framework 2. Contemporary Discourses regarding Children, Childhood and Rights 3. Participation in Decision-Making 4. Children and Families in Need of Support 5. Children in Need of Protection 6. Children in Kinship, Foster and Residential Care 7. Children and Young People's Well-Being 8. Children and Young People's Education 9. Children, Young People and Youth Justice 10. New Risks to Children and Young People: Human Trafficking, Child Sexual Exploitation, Abuse Online 11. Monitoring and Improving Practice