Evaluating Family Support

Evaluating Family Support

Thinking Internationally, Thinking Critically

Katz, Ilan; Pinkerton, John

John Wiley & Sons Inc

04/2003

360

Dura

Inglês

9780471497233

15 a 20 dias

696

Descrição não disponível.
List of Illustrations.

About the Editors.

List of Contributors.

Foreword by Heather B. Weiss.

Acknowledgements.

PART I: THE NEED FOR INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON.

1. Perspective through International Comparison in theEvaluation of Family Support (John Pinkerton and Ilan Katz).

PART II: UNDERPINNING ISSUES.

2. Political and Technical Issues Facing Evaluators of FamilySupport (Jane Tunstill).

3. Social Exclusion, Family Support and Evaluation (CorinneMay-Chahal, et al.).

4. The Value of Resilience as a Key Concept in Evaluating FamilySupport (Robbie Gilligan).

5. Issues in Evaluating Family Support Services: An AmericanPerspective (Peter Pecora).

6. Comparative Research as a Method of Evaluating Systems(Rachael Hetherington).

PART III: 'CASE STUDIES' FROM AROUND THE WORLD.

7. National Policy Making and the Need to Evaluate FamilySupport in the Republic of Ireland (Catherine Hazlett).

8. A Culturally Relevant Model for Evaluating Family Services inHong Kong (Monit Cheung and Chi-Kwong Law).

9. Lessons from the Evaluation of Fa mily Support in New Zealand(Jackie Sanders and Robyn Munford).

10. A Nationaln Evaluation of Family Support Services: AnEvaluation of Services Provided by the NSPCC in the United Kingdom(Ruth Gardner).

11. Empowering Parents: A Two-Generation Intervention in aCommunity Context in Northern Ireland (Nuala Quiery, etal.).

12. The Indicators Study: An Cross-Site ImplementationEvaluation of the Community Partnerships for Protecting ChildrenInitiative in America (Stephen Budde).

13. Policy Roots and Practice Growth: Evaluating Family Supporton the West Coast of Ireland (John Canavan and Pat Dolan).

14. The Resourceful Adolescent Project: A Universal Approach toPreventing Adolescent Depression through Promoting Resilience andFamily-Well Being in Australia (Ian Shochet and David Ham).

15. Evaluation of the Contact Family Service in Sweden (GunvorAndersson).

PART IV: TOWARDS AN INTERNATIONAL AGENDA.

16. International Convergence and Divergence: Towards an OpenSystem Model in the Evaluation of Family Support (Ilan Katz andJohn Pinkerton).

Index.
Assunto não disponível.
delivery; global; issue; family; key; effective; child; consensus; best; little; ways; constitutes; internationally; topical; full; conceptual; operational; complex; problems; review; experienced; team; pinkerton; evaluators; care policy