Skip to main content
Have a personal or library account? Click to login
The organisation of interagency training to safeguard children in England: a case study using realistic evaluation Cover

The organisation of interagency training to safeguard children in England: a case study using realistic evaluation

By: Demi Patsios and  John Carpenter  
Open Access
|Nov 2010

References

  1. Department of Health Working together to safeguard children 1999 London The Stationery Office
  2. HM Government Working together to safeguard children. A guide to inter-agency working to safeguard and promote the welfare of children 2006 London DCSF
  3. Laming WHL (Lord). The Protection of Children in England: A Progress Report following the death of Baby P 2009 London The Stationery Office
  4. Department of Health and The Home Office The Victoria Climbié Inquiry, Report of an Inquiry by Lord Laming 2003 London The Stationery Office
  5. Morrison T Working together to safeguard children: challenges and changes for inter-agency co-ordination in child protection Journal of Interprofessional Care 2000 14 4 363 73
  6. Charles M Howarth J Investing in interagency training to safeguard children: an act of faith or an act of reason? Children and Society 2009 23 5 364 76
  7. Barton A Welbourne P Context and its significance in identifying ‘what works’ in child protection Child Abuse Review 2005 14 177 94
  8. Hardy B Hudson B Waddington E What makes a good partnership? What makes a good partnership? A Partnership Assessment Tool 2003 London Nuffield Institute/NHS Executive
  9. Pawson R Tilley N Realistic evaluation 1997 London Sage
  10. Tilley N Realistic evaluation: an overview Paper presented to the Founding Conference of the Danish Evaluation Society; 2000 Sep. [cited 2008, 15 Feb]. Available from: http://www.evidence-basedmanagement.com/research_practice/articles/nick_tilley.pdf
  11. Miles M Huberman M Qualitative data analysis: an expanded sourcebook 1994 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, CA Sage
  12. West M Markiewicz L The effective partnership working inventory 2006 Birmingham Aston Business School (Working Paper)
  13. Mackintosh M Partnership: issues of policy and negotiation Local Economy 1992 7 210 24
  14. Hastings A Unravelling the process of ‘partnership’ in urban regeneration policy Urban Studies 1996 33 253 68
  15. Department for Children School and Families Children assessed to be in need by children’s social services, England, 6 months ending 31 March 2009 2009 London DCFS
  16. France A Munro E Meredith J Manful E Beckhelling J Effectiveness of the New Safeguarding Children Boards in England 2009 London DCFS (Interim Report, DCSF RR-126)
  17. Rodríguez C Langley A Béland F Denis JL Governance, power, and mandated collaboration in an interorganizational network Administration and Society 2007 39 2 150 93
  18. Barton A Managing fragmentation: an area child protection committee in a time of change 2002 Aldershot Ashgate
  19. Horwath J Morrison T Collaboration, integration and change in children’s services: critical issues and key ingredients Child Abuse and Neglect 2007 31 55 69
  20. Hudson B Hardy B Henwood M Wistow G Reynolds J Henderson J Seden J Worth JC Bullman A In pursuit of interagency collaboration in the public sector: What is the contribution of theory and research? The managing care reader 2003 London Routledge p. 232–41
  21. Dowling B Powell M Glendinning C Conceptualising successful partnerships Health and Social Care in the Community 2004 12 4 309 17
  22. Sullivan H Skelcher C Working across boundaries: collaboration in public services 2002 Basingstoke Palgrave
  23. Glasby J Dickinson H Partnership working in health and social care 2008 Bristol Policy Press
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.548 | Journal eISSN: 1568-4156
Language: English
Submitted on: Jul 17, 2010
Accepted on: Oct 18, 2010
Published on: Nov 16, 2010
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2010 Demi Patsios, John Carpenter, published by Igitur, Utrecht Publishing & Archiving
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.