The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy

This paper is the first of a series emerging from a study of the practice of policy creation when a child welfare event comes to the notice of the public as a scandal and engages the attention of politicians and the media. The daily newspaper, The West Australian reported extensively on the Coroner&...

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Main Authors: Harrison, C., Harries, M., Liddiard, Mark
Format: Journal Article
Published: Australian College for Child and Family Protection Practitioners Inc. 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/66962
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author Harrison, C.
Harries, M.
Liddiard, Mark
author_facet Harrison, C.
Harries, M.
Liddiard, Mark
author_sort Harrison, C.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper is the first of a series emerging from a study of the practice of policy creation when a child welfare event comes to the notice of the public as a scandal and engages the attention of politicians and the media. The daily newspaper, The West Australian reported extensively on the Coroner's finding into the death of an 11month old toddler, Wade Scale, known to the child protection department. Debate and policy responses in the West Australian Parliament during the period of four months in 2006 are used as a case study to explore and identify the policy proposals that emerge out of a politicized landscape. The aim was the development of a theoretical framework and practical strategies to enable the public to have a more nuanced understanding of this complex issue and develop more supportive practice models for vulnerable families. The analysis identified specific policies dominated by a discourse of blame and regulation.
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:31:41Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Australian College for Child and Family Protection Practitioners Inc.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-669622018-05-18T07:56:44Z The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy Harrison, C. Harries, M. Liddiard, Mark This paper is the first of a series emerging from a study of the practice of policy creation when a child welfare event comes to the notice of the public as a scandal and engages the attention of politicians and the media. The daily newspaper, The West Australian reported extensively on the Coroner's finding into the death of an 11month old toddler, Wade Scale, known to the child protection department. Debate and policy responses in the West Australian Parliament during the period of four months in 2006 are used as a case study to explore and identify the policy proposals that emerge out of a politicized landscape. The aim was the development of a theoretical framework and practical strategies to enable the public to have a more nuanced understanding of this complex issue and develop more supportive practice models for vulnerable families. The analysis identified specific policies dominated by a discourse of blame and regulation. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/66962 Australian College for Child and Family Protection Practitioners Inc. restricted
spellingShingle Harrison, C.
Harries, M.
Liddiard, Mark
The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy
title The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy
title_full The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy
title_fullStr The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy
title_full_unstemmed The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy
title_short The perfect storm: Politics, media and child welfare policy
title_sort perfect storm: politics, media and child welfare policy
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/66962