Results 201 to 210 of about 57,967 (247)
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Children's rights and school psychology: Children's right to participation
Journal of School Psychology, 2014The Convention on the Rights of the Child detailed an international imperative to fulfilling, protecting, and respecting the rights of every child. In particular, the Convention set out a clear mandate for guaranteeing opportunities for children to be heard on all matters of concern to them. The attainment of these goals involves respecting and valuing
Gerison, Lansdown +2 more
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Nursing Standard, 1991
Evidence that Britain is not a child- friendly society appears today in The UN Convention and Children's Rights in the UK.
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Evidence that Britain is not a child- friendly society appears today in The UN Convention and Children's Rights in the UK.
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Children's Rights and Children's Lives
Ethics, 1988A friend who lived in New York could not see the sky from her windows. To discover the day's weather she had to peer at a glass-fronted building opposite, which offered a blurred reflection of part of the sky above her own building. I shall argue that when we take rights as fundamental in looking at ethical issues in children's lives we also get an ...
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Children's Rights, Family Rights
International Review of Qualitative Research, 2011In this article I explore the intersections of children's human rights, social policy, and qualitative inquiry from a social work perspective. First, I consider the relationship between human rights work and social work. Second, I argue that children add complexity to the human rights debate.
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2013
Through policies at the international, national, and state levels, social workers are often directed to respect children’s rights while also ensuring their best interests. The concept of children’s rights is diffuse and can be difficult to operationalize in practice.
Anne Blumenthal, Karen M. Staller
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Through policies at the international, national, and state levels, social workers are often directed to respect children’s rights while also ensuring their best interests. The concept of children’s rights is diffuse and can be difficult to operationalize in practice.
Anne Blumenthal, Karen M. Staller
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Canadian Journal of Criminology, 1980
The rights accorded to children either in law or in moral and ethical practices are a reflection of the status of the child in a particular society at a particular time. They are continually evolving, although not always in a smooth and desirable progression.
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The rights accorded to children either in law or in moral and ethical practices are a reflection of the status of the child in a particular society at a particular time. They are continually evolving, although not always in a smooth and desirable progression.
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1997
Over the centuries, but particularly during the twentieth century, children have acquired more rights and more freedom to make their own decisions, particularly where they are mature and intelligent enough to do so. This has not always been the case for at one time a child’s wishes were largely ignored, as parents, particularly fathers, had more or ...
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Over the centuries, but particularly during the twentieth century, children have acquired more rights and more freedom to make their own decisions, particularly where they are mature and intelligent enough to do so. This has not always been the case for at one time a child’s wishes were largely ignored, as parents, particularly fathers, had more or ...
openaire +1 more source

