1st Edition

Care Work Present and Future

Edited By Janet Boddy, Claire Cameron, Peter Moss Copyright 2006
    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    Care Work considers the current situation of care work and care workers, from childcare to eldercare, and from family carers to paid carers. It examines the composition of the current workforce (more than a million in the UK alone), the knowledge and education needed for care work, and the significance of where care work is undertaken (in the home, in institutions).

    Considering potential challenges and scenarios, the book poses big questions about the future of care work – offering some possible answers. Wide-ranging and innovative, Care Work will be of great interest to academic and policy audiences, and managers or practitioners working in health, social care, childcare, youth work and social policy.

    Introduction  Part 1: Thematic Critique  1. Nineteenth Century Understandings of Care Work  2. Who are Today's Care Workers?  3. Gender Issues and Care Workers  4. Knowledge and Education for Care Workers: What is Good Enough  5. Location, Location, Location: The Importance of Where Care Work Takes Place  Part 2: Changing Care Work Organisations  6. The Changing Face of Care Work  7. The Professional Care Worker: The Social Pedagogue in Northern Europe  8. An Emerging Profession: Providing Mentors for Children and Young People Who Have Problem Behaviour  9. Semi-Formal Care Work: The Case of Foster Care  10. Informal Work: Caring Across the Generations  Conclusion

    Biography

    Janet Boddy and Claire Cameron are researchers at the Thomas Coram Research Unit. Peter Moss is a Professor of Early Childhood Provision at the Institute of Education University of London.