Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/42651
Title: Is there a place for children as emotional beings in child protection policy and practice?
Authors: Drake, Gabrielle
Edenborough, Michel
Falloon, Jan
Fattore, Tobia
Felton, Rhea
Mason, Jan
Mogensen, Lisa
Keywords: Well-being -- Social aspects
Emotional intelligence -- Australia
Emotional conditioning
Child welfare -- Australia
Issue Date: 2019-04
Publisher: University of Malta. Centre for Resilience & Socio-Emotional Health
Citation: Drake, G., Edenborough, M., Falloon, J., Fattore, T., Felton., Mason, J., & Mogensen, L. (2019). Is there a place for children as emotional beings in child protection policy and practice? International Journal of Emotional Education, 11(1), 115-134.
Abstract: The emotional aspects of children’s social relations have generally been marginalised in social science discourse. Children, who participated in the Australian segment of the Children’s Understandings of Well-being (CUWB) project used various media to ‘voice’ the importance for their well-being of emotional relatedness with family, friends, animals and places. In this paper we place our construction of children’s discussion of emotional relatedness in the context of the ‘emotional turn’ in research and briefly describe how the methodology for our project facilitated an understanding of the importance of children’s emotions for their lives in the present. We then focus on the significance for child protection policy and practice, of what children tell us about feeling safe, as this relates to the importance of agency and relatedness with people and also with places.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/42651
ISSN: 20737629
Appears in Collections:IJEE, Volume 11 Issue 1
IJEE, Volume 11 Issue 1

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