Description

Book Synopsis
This book introduces the concept of emotional politics. It shows how collective emotions, such as anger, shame, fear and disgust, are generated and reflected by official documents, politicians and the media.

Trade Review
"Brimming with insight and ideas for any social policy specialist interested in how human emotion can affect all levels of society and human operations." LSE Review of Books
"This book takes a panoramic view of child protection tragedies, from Maria Colwell in 1973 to the present day." Critical and Radical Social Work
"This book manages to be both timely and well able to rise to the challenge of furthering comprehension of the treatment of topics known for generating more heat than light." British Journal of Social Work
"Highly readable and very well structured....valuable for social work practitioners, especially those in child protection. Jo Warner makes a strong case for greater account to be taken of how social work policy and practice are powerfully shaped by individual and collective emotion." Child Abuse Review
“Warner makes a strong case for greater account to be taken of how social work policy and practice are powerfully shaped by individual and collective emotion…this book is highly readable, well-structured and valuable for social work practitioners.” Child Abuse Review - Tamsin Cottis, Integrative Arts Child Psychotherapist, Consultant Clinical Supervisor, Respond, London, England
"This brilliant book takes our understanding of the emotional dynamics of social work, child protection, politics, power and everyday life to an entirely new level. Intellectually rich yet always relevant to practice, it shows how under recognised emotions like disgust and visceral notions of respectability not only create definitions of child abuse, but also what it means to be a good citizen and parent." Professor Harry Ferguson, University of Nottingham
"This thought provoking and erudite book analyses the role of emotion and moral judgement in public and political responses to childhood and children at risk. It addresses the role of disgust and shame and thus animates the predictable responses to child deaths. The book concludes with a powerful argument for an emotional politics of child protection." Sue White, University of Birmingham
"A meticulously researched book" - Australian Journal Social Work

Table of Contents
Introducing emotional politics; ‘Heads must roll’? The politics of national anger and the press; Hidden in plain sight: poverty and the politics of disgust; From crisis to reform: the emotional politics of child rescue and commemoration; Risk, respectability and the emotional politics of class; The emotionality of official documents: the serious case review as an active text; Comparative perspectives: cultures of difference and convergence; Towards a new emotional politics of social work and child protection.

The Emotional Politics of Social Work and Child

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    A Paperback by Joanne Warner

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      View other formats and editions of The Emotional Politics of Social Work and Child by Joanne Warner

      Publisher: Bristol University Press
      Publication Date: 1/12/2015 12:01:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781447318439, 978-1447318439
      ISBN10: 1447318439
      Also in:
      Media studies

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book introduces the concept of emotional politics. It shows how collective emotions, such as anger, shame, fear and disgust, are generated and reflected by official documents, politicians and the media.

      Trade Review
      "Brimming with insight and ideas for any social policy specialist interested in how human emotion can affect all levels of society and human operations." LSE Review of Books
      "This book takes a panoramic view of child protection tragedies, from Maria Colwell in 1973 to the present day." Critical and Radical Social Work
      "This book manages to be both timely and well able to rise to the challenge of furthering comprehension of the treatment of topics known for generating more heat than light." British Journal of Social Work
      "Highly readable and very well structured....valuable for social work practitioners, especially those in child protection. Jo Warner makes a strong case for greater account to be taken of how social work policy and practice are powerfully shaped by individual and collective emotion." Child Abuse Review
      “Warner makes a strong case for greater account to be taken of how social work policy and practice are powerfully shaped by individual and collective emotion…this book is highly readable, well-structured and valuable for social work practitioners.” Child Abuse Review - Tamsin Cottis, Integrative Arts Child Psychotherapist, Consultant Clinical Supervisor, Respond, London, England
      "This brilliant book takes our understanding of the emotional dynamics of social work, child protection, politics, power and everyday life to an entirely new level. Intellectually rich yet always relevant to practice, it shows how under recognised emotions like disgust and visceral notions of respectability not only create definitions of child abuse, but also what it means to be a good citizen and parent." Professor Harry Ferguson, University of Nottingham
      "This thought provoking and erudite book analyses the role of emotion and moral judgement in public and political responses to childhood and children at risk. It addresses the role of disgust and shame and thus animates the predictable responses to child deaths. The book concludes with a powerful argument for an emotional politics of child protection." Sue White, University of Birmingham
      "A meticulously researched book" - Australian Journal Social Work

      Table of Contents
      Introducing emotional politics; ‘Heads must roll’? The politics of national anger and the press; Hidden in plain sight: poverty and the politics of disgust; From crisis to reform: the emotional politics of child rescue and commemoration; Risk, respectability and the emotional politics of class; The emotionality of official documents: the serious case review as an active text; Comparative perspectives: cultures of difference and convergence; Towards a new emotional politics of social work and child protection.

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