|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Fatemeh Ebtehaj , Bridget Lindley , Martin Richards , Tabitha FreemanPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Hart Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.462kg ISBN: 9781841136974ISBN 10: 1841136972 Pages: 326 Publication Date: 15 September 2006 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents"Notes on Contributors 1. Introduction: Regulating Relationships? FATEMEH EBTEHAJ Part 1: Who is Kin and what does it mean to be Kin in Contemporary British Society? 2. 'Close Marriage' in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Century Middle Strata LEONORE DAVIDOFF 3. Status Anxiety? : The Rush for Family Recognition ANDREW BAINHAM 4. DNA Testing and Kinship: Paternity, Genealogy and the Search for the 'Truth' of Genetic Origins TABITHA FREEMAN and MARTIN RICHARDS Part 2: Kin Care of children and adolescents 5. Children and Their Changing Families: Obligations, Responsibilities, and Benefits JAN PRYOR 6. Substitute Care of Children by Members of Their Extended Families and Social Networks: An Overview JOAN HUNT 7. Recognising Carers for hat they do - Legal Problems and Solutions for the Kinship Care of Children JUDITH MASSON and BRIDGET LINDLEY 8. Restorative Practices: Repairing Harm through Kith and Kin LORRAINE GELSTHORPE with LAYLA SKINNS Part 3: Kin Contact and Care of Elderly People 9. Gender and Kinship in Contemporary Britain JANE NOLAN and JACQUELINE SCOTT 10. Kin Availability, Contact and Support Exchanges between Adult Children and their Parents in Great Britain EMILY GRUNDY and MICHAEL MURPHY 11. Maintenance of the Elderly and Legal Signalling - Kinship and State MIKA OLDHAM Part 4: Migrant Communities and Transnational kinship 12. The Impact of Migration on Care: Iranian Experiences FATEMEH EBTEHAJ 13. Family Care and Transnational Kinship: British-Pakistani Experiences KAVERI HARRISS and ALISON SHAW 14. Kinship, Infertility and New Reproductive Technologies: A British-Pakistani Muslim Perspective NAZALIE IQBAL and ROBERT SIMPSON Afterword 15. Kinship as ""Family"" in Contemporary Britain JANET FINCH Index"Reviewsa coherent contribution to understandings of the interaction between legal frameworks and lived experiences of kinshipcontains theoretical chapters and both qualitative and quantitative empirical chapters which compliment each other wellthe book will be of particular interest to academics working in this area, as well as to policy-makers and service-providers.Katherine DaviesJournal of Social Welfare and Family LawVol. 29, Nos. 3-4, Sept-Dec 07This timely collection draws together fascinating and often comprehensive information, analysis and arguments about kin and social policy. If readers require either a detailed overview of contemporary, cultural, or historical socio-legal perspectives on kinship, or a reference book about specific kin subtopics, then this book is to be highly recommended.Bob BroadChildren & Society, Vol 21April 2007 ...a coherent contribution to understandings of the interaction between legal frameworks and lived experiences of kinship...contains theoretical chapters and both qualitative and quantitative empirical chapters which compliment each other well...the book will be of particular interest to academics working in this area, as well as to policy-makers and service-providers. Katherine Davies Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law Vol. 29, Nos. 3-4, Sept-Dec 07 This timely collection draws together fascinating and often comprehensive information, analysis and arguments about kin and social policy. If readers require either a detailed overview of contemporary, cultural, or historical socio-legal perspectives on kinship, or a reference book about specific kin subtopics, then this book is to be highly recommended. Bob Broad Children & Society, Vol 21 April 2007 !a coherent contribution to understandings of the interaction between legal frameworks and lived experiences of kinship!contains theoretical chapters and both qualitative and quantitative empirical chapters which compliment each other well!the book will be of particular interest to academics working in this area, as well as to policy-makers and service-providers. Katherine Davies Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law Vol. 29, Nos. 3-4, Sept-Dec 07 This timely collection draws together fascinating and often comprehensive information, analysis and arguments about kin and social policy. If readers require either a detailed overview of contemporary, cultural, or historical socio-legal perspectives on kinship, or a reference book about specific kin subtopics, then this book is to be highly recommended. Bob Broad Children & Society, Vol 21 April 2007 .a coherent contribution to understandings of the interaction between legal frameworks and lived experiences of kinship.contains theoretical chapters and both qualitative and quantitative empirical chapters which compliment each other well.the book will be of particular interest to academics working in this area, as well as to policy-makers and service-providers. Katherine Davies Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law Vol. 29, Nos. 3-4, Sept-Dec 07 This timely collection draws together fascinating and often comprehensive information, analysis and arguments about kin and social policy. If readers require either a detailed overview of contemporary, cultural, or historical socio-legal perspectives on kinship, or a reference book about specific kin subtopics, then this book is to be highly recommended. Bob Broad Children & Society, Vol 21 April 2007 …a coherent contribution to understandings of the interaction between legal frameworks and lived experiences of kinship…contains theoretical chapters and both qualitative and quantitative empirical chapters which compliment each other well…the book will be of particular interest to academics working in this area, as well as to policy-makers and service-providers. -- Katherine Davies * Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, Vol. 29, Nos. 3-4 * This timely collection draws together fascinating and often comprehensive information, analysis and arguments about kin and social policy. If readers require either a detailed overview of contemporary, cultural, or historical socio-legal perspectives on kinship, or a reference book about specific kin subtopics, then this book is to be highly recommended. -- Bob Broad * Children & Society, Vol 21 * Author InformationFatemeh Ebtehaj is an associate member of the Centre for Family Research, University of Cambridge. Bridget Lindley is a solicitor and family mediator and was a Senior Research Associate at the Centre for Family Research, University of Cambridge. Martin Richards is Emeritus Professor of Family Research at the Centre for Family Research, University of Cambridge. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |