1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910812420903321

Autore

Lafferty Renée Nicole <1973->

Titolo

The guardianship of best interests : institutional care for the children of the poor in Halifax, 1850-1960 / / Renée N. Lafferty

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Montreal & Kingston ; ; London : , : McGill-Queen's University Press, , [2013]

©2013

ISBN

9780773587946

0773587942

9781283901567

9780773540552

0773540555

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (xix, 373 pages, 6 unnumbered pages) : illustrations, charts

Collana

McGill-Queen's studies in the history of religion. Series two ; ; 60.

Disciplina

362.732

Soggetti

Poor children - Institutional care - Nova Scotia - Halifax - History - 19th century

Poor children - Institutional care - Nova Scotia - Halifax - History - 20th century

Urban poor - Institutional care - Nova Scotia - Halifax - History - 19th century

Urban poor - Institutional care - Nova Scotia - Halifax - History - 20th century

Institutional care - Nova Scotia - Halifax - History - 19th century

Institutional care - Nova Scotia - Halifax - History - 20th century

Institutional care

Case studies.

History

Nova Scotia Halifax

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references (pages 333-359) and index.

Nota di contenuto

"We Need No Reform": The Organization of Local Services and Administrative Innovation, c. 1850-1924 -- Race Uplift, Racism, and the Childhood Ideal: Founding and Funding the Nova Scotia Home for



Colored Children -- The Unremitting Exercise of Watchfulness: Institutional Environments, Routines, and Practices -- "Out of Mutual Respect Will Come Mutual Responsibility": Coordinating Services and Promoting Interagency Cooperation after World War One -- Managing "High Standards of Professional Ethics": Institutionalization, Gwendolen Lantz, and the Emergence of the "Modern" Children's Home, c. 1940-1952 -- From Protection to Treatment: Group Care and the Transformation of the Institution after World War Two -- Conclusion -- Appendices.

Sommario/riassunto

"A history of charitable children's homes and emergent state-centred child welfare policy in Nova Scotia. It is difficult to imagine how orphan asylums and children's homes - often depicted as places where abuse, deprivation, and cruelty were commonplace - once presented a viable solution to child neglect. Renée N. Lafferty examines this response as it played out in Halifax, demonstrating how these homes reacted both creatively and valiantly to their environment, despite chronic underfunding and a narrow vision of the possibilities available to disadvantaged children.The Guardianship of Best Interests traces the creation and administration of children's homes in Halifax from the mid-nineteenth century to their closure in the mid-twentieth. Against the backdrop of a city torn apart by race and religious politics, financial challenges, two world wars, and the devastating explosion of 1917, Halifax institutions frequently represented themselves as the cutting edge of professional child welfare methods. Placing their histories at the core of this study, Lafferty challenges the common assertion that such homes were readily abandoned in favour of the foster care method promoted by the Children's Aid Society.Through the unique perspective gained by considering inter-denominational competition, along with the effects of racism and the political posturing of the province's emerging welfare bureaucracy, The Guardianship of Best Interests unearths the significant similarities between past child welfare practices and our current approaches toward neglect and dependency."--Provided by publisher.