Childhood

Changing Contexts

Arnlaug Leira|Chiara Saraceno
Emerald
Emerald

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Paperback / softback
9781781901564
01 August 2012
$59.99
Hardback
9780762314195
29 February 2008
$139.99
eBook (PDF)
9781849505338
29 February 2008
$59.99

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  • Description
  • Contents
Demographic and societal changes are strongly affecting the contexts of childhood and the experience of being children. At the same time, across social groups and across societies, diversities and inequalities in childhood are taking new forms. In the developed world, in particular, children their number, their welfare, their education, the division of power and responsibilities over them among the different social actors have entered the public agenda, at the national and supranational level. Public concern over issues such as fertility rates, mothers working, early childhood education and care as well as solemn international declarations of children's rights are examples of the ongoing politicization of childhood. Drawing both on micro and macro, national and comparative studies, this volume of "Comparative Social Research" traces some of the trends and analyzes in comparative perspective how they affect images and practices of childhood and transforms responsibilities for children. The volume's focus is mainly on children in the developed countries, but attention is also paid to transnational diversities and to the impact of globalisation through the experiences of migrant children and of children living through the processes of modernization in the developing world.

Childcare services in 25 European union member states: The Barcelona targets revisited;

  • Policy packages for families with children in 11 European countries: Multiple approaches;
  • The 'meaning' of children in Dutch and German family policy;
  • Changes in children's age and generation mosaics: Challenges to research and policy;
  • Grandchildhood in Germany and Italy: An exploration;
  • Children's welfare in ageing Europe: Generations apart?;
  • First born in Amsterdam: The changing mother-child setting;
  • Changing childhoods: Migrant children and the confrontation of uncertainty;
  • Diverse childhoods: Implications for childcare, protection, participation and research practice;
  • Childhood: A homogeneous generational group?;
  • Street youth's life-course transitions;
  • Children, new social risks and policy change: A lego™ future?;
  • Investing in children and childhood: A new welfare policy paradigm and its implications.