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Creative Child Advocacy Global Perspectives
by Ved Kumari and Susan Brooks

   


 


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Idea Advocacy for Children Who Are Deaf Or Hard of Hearing: A Question and Answer Book for Parents and Professionals
by Bonnie Poitras Tucker

 

Book description:
Arizona State Univ., Tempe. Guide to understanding advocacy issues relevant to education, for parents and professionals providing services to deaf or hard of hearing children. Softcover

Synopsis:
Written primarily for parents who have children who are deaf or hard of hearing, this work offers guidance in obtaining the necessary benefits that are appropriate for their children. It also contains information on the 1997 Amendments to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).

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Somebody Else's Children: The Courts, the Kids, and the Struggle to Save America's Troubled Families
by  John Hubner, Jill Wolfson
 

    

Book Description:
With increasing urgency, the plight of the American family grips the national conscience. The family courts are often our society's last safety net to prevent disaster. In this penetrating expose of the inner workings of the U.S. family court system, two award-winning journalists provide an intimate look at the lives of the children whose fate it decides. 384 pp. Author publicity. 35,000 print.

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NO MATTER HOW LOUD I SHOUT : A Year in the Life of Juvenile Court
by Edward Humes
 

Book Review:
Amazon.com
This is one powerful book: it will grab you with vivid stories about individual kids, draw you in with honesty and compassion, and amaze you with alarming details about how the juvenile justice system works (or rather, doesn't work) in America. Anyone interested in the problem of crime should read Edward Humes's gripping account of how future criminals are shaped in youth, and how the system misses its chance to help them before they're lost for good. As Richard Bernstein writes in the New York Times, "There are many admirable things about Mr. Humes's book, which, despite its grim subject matter, has a narrative power that keeps you reading right to the end. One of them is that Mr. Humes is a shrewd and perceptive observer of his young subjects ... [and he] allows himself to feel sympathy for the young people whose lives and crimes he describes.... At the same time, Mr. Humes never exonerates bad children for their badness." No Matter How Loud I Shout was a finalist for the 1997 Edgar Award in Fact Crime.


From Publishers Weekly
After being granted access by court order to a system that is usually closed to the public, Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Humes (Buried Secrets) spent 1994 surveying the largely futile attempts of Los Angeles to deal with its juvenile crime. He concentrates here on a few who have not let themselves be overwhelmed by the deluge of defendants-80,000 cases are pending at any given time: Judge Roosevelt Dorn, who is also a clergyman; Deputy DA Peggy Beckstrand, who finally leaves the system to... read more --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Children in the Legal System: Cases and Materials (2nd ed)
by Samuel M. Davis, Elizabeth S. Scott, Walter Wadlington, Whitebread Charles H.
 

Book description:
Children in the legal system focuses on what has been accomplished through legislation and judicial action since the Juvenile Justice Standards were published. General coverage of the juvenile justice system reflects the significant changes and new trends in this field. Highlights include:
Cases that deal with subjects ranging from nocturnal juvenile curfews and school newspaper regulation to child abuse and medical decision making Discussion of permanent foster care Expanded coverage of custody and visitation Challenging conceptual treatment of the decision making capacity and authority of minor children An examination of adolescence as a legal category

 

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Early Childhood at Risk: Actions and Advocacy for Young Children
by Victoria Jean Dimidjian
 


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Children and the Law: In a Nutshell (Nutshell Series)
by Sarah H. Ramsey, Douglas E. Abrams
 


Book description:
"This Nutshell follows the structure and format of the authors' casebook�Children and the Law: Doctrine, Policy and Practice. The authors have devoted entire chapters to the meaning of "parent," abuse and neglect, the foster care system, adoption, medical decision-making, support and other financial responsibilities, protective legislation, and delinquency. Representation of children is also covered throughout the book, as are several relevant international law issues, including the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, international child labor, and U.S. tobacco exports to children overseas.

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The Lost Children of Wilder: The Epic Struggle to Change Foster Care
by Nina Bernstein
 


Book Review:
Amazon.com
At age 12, Shirley Wilder ran away from an abusive home and landed in New York City's foster-care system. By age 13, she was named the plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit that challenged the city's 150-year-old system as unconstitutional. At 14, Shirley gave birth to a son, Lamont, who was soon swept up in the same system. This absorbing account by New York Times reporter Nina Bernstein follows the threads of the tragic lives of Shirley and Lamont Wilder and the lawsuit that bears their name. In the process it illuminates the city's--and the nation's--dysfunctional social welfare system and its impact on the children it purportedly helps.
The Wilder lawsuit was filed in 1973 by a passionate young lawyer who stuck by it through 26 years of litigation, without the case ever being fully resolved. The accusation: that New York City's system violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments for giving private religious agencies control of publicly financed foster-care beds. These mostly Catholic and Jewish agencies gave preference to white Catholic and Jewish children, while the growing numbers of black and Protestant children were sent to inappropriate institutions that left them with more problems than they had when they came. Such was the fate of Shirley, who, for lack of anywhere else to go, was placed in Hudson, a state reformatory for delinquents with no treatment services for abandoned or abused children. Hudson "looked like a camp from the outside and was unmistakably a prison within." There was rampant violence and sexual abuse, and girls were regularly punished by being put in "the hole," a 5-by-8-foot cell with no windows, furniture, or heat, which Shirley would later testify was like "Winter. Winter--all year round." But a case that named state and city officials, 77 voluntary agencies and their directors, and 84 individual defendants including nuns, rabbis, and clergymen, and that threatened to pit blacks and Jews against each other, was a case destined to enter a legal wilderness of avoidance and delay.

Shirley and Lamont's unforgettable stories reveal the deep fault lines in a system that often does more harm than good. While reforms come and go with little success, Bernstein makes clear that the child welfare system will never really change until there is a coming to terms with the system's place as "a political battleground for abiding national conflicts over race, religion, gender and inequality" and the "unacknowledged contradictions between policies that punish the 'undeserving poor' and pledge to help all needy children." --Lesley Reed --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Disabled Children: Research, the Law and Good Practice
by Janet Read, Luke Clements

 


Book description:
(Jessica Kingsley) Univ. of Warwick, UK. Guide to enable professionals working with disabled children and young adults, and their families, to understand the relevant law and apply it to improve the quality of life of children with disabilities. British-oriented. Softcover.

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The Human Rights of Street and Working Children: A Practical Manual for Advocates
by Iain Byrne, Nelson Mandela

 


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Children, Social Science, and the Law
by Bette Bottoms , Margaret Bull Kovera , Bradley D. McAuliff

 


Book Description:
This study integrates social science research, social policy, and legal analysis related to children and the law. It provides the most cutting-edge information available on topics such as child abuse, children's eyewitness testimony, divorce and custody, juvenile crime, and children's rights. The volume is an important resource for researchers, attorneys, judges, policy makers, legislators, and mental health, social service, and police professionals.

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