Supporting children when parents separate
Embedding a crisis intervention approach within family justice, education and mental health policy
By Mervyn Murch
Published:
04 Jul 2018Page count:
276 pagesISBN:
978-1447345961Product Dimensions:
156 x 234 mm£27.99£22.39You save £5.60 (20%)- Pre-order
Published:
04 Jul 2018Page count:
276 pagesISBN:
978-1447345947Product Dimensions:
156 x 234 mm£80.00£64.00You save £16.00 (20%)- Pre-order
Published:
04 Jul 2018Page count:
276 pagesISBN:
978-1447345978Product Dimensions:
156 x 234 mm£27.99£22.39You save £5.60 (20%)- Coming soon
Published:
04 Jul 2018Page count:
276 pagesISBN:
978-1447345985Product Dimensions:
156 x 234 mm£27.99£22.39You save £5.60 (20%)
About the book
After years of research and reflection on the work of the interdisciplinary family justice system Mervyn Murch offers a fresh approach to supporting the thousands of children every year who experience a complex form of bereavement following parental separation and divorce. This stressful family change, combined with the loss of support due to austerity cuts, can damage their education, well-being, mental health and long-term life chances.Murch argues for early preventative intervention which responds to children's worries when they first present them, without waiting until things have gone badly wrong. His radical proposals for reform involve a much more coordinated and joined up approach by schools, the Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service, and Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services.
This book encourages practitioners and academics to look outside their professional silos and to see the world through the eyes of children in crisis to enable services to offer direct support in a manner and at a time when it is most needed.
Content
Part I;Introduction: setting out the stall;
Numbers, scale and trends;
Summarised research reviews upon which to promote social and emotional wellbeing in children of separated parents;
Hearing the voice of the child: messages from research that expose gaps between theory, principle and reality;
Part II;
Children dealing with the crisis of parental separation: towards new supportive practice and policy;
Children in crisis speak out;
The crisis model of preventive mental health and its potential application for support services for children coping with parental separation;
The pros and cons of the preventive mental health approach;
Providing primary preventative short term crisis intervention support for children in schools;
Part III;
Family justice policy under the coalition government (2010-2015) – how will a new regime meet the needs of children with separating and divorcing parents?;
The repeal of S41 of the matrimonial causes act 1973 and related reforms: is the state turning a blind eye to the needs of children in divorce proceedings?;
Demolition and reconstruction in the family justice regime: what can be salvaged for children whose parents separate and divorce?;
Changing the culture of family justice: barriers to be overcome;
Part IV;
The future policy and practice challenge;
Barriers obstructing a preventive mental health approach;
Supporting children facing inter-parental conflict: a development strategy to reframe the approach;
Scanning the horizon.
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