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1. Family Support and the Media in Ireland: Newspaper Content Analysis 2014-2017

2. Learning from the Literature on Social Work and Social Care with Children: The Utility of a Jansson Framework of Policy-Practice

3. Inclusive child welfare services, disabled children, and their families: insights from a European comparison of social policy and social (work) practice in Austria, Iceland, and Ireland.

4. 'I've Changed so Much within a Year': Care Leavers' Perspectives on the Aftercare Planning Process

5. The Sexual Exploitation of Children and Young People in Northern Ireland: Overview from the Barnardo's beyond the Shadows Service

6. Child Poverty as Public Policy: Direct Provision and Asylum Seeker Children in the Republic of Ireland

7. A Review of Children First and Keeping Safe Training in Ireland: Implications for the Future

8. The Value of Family Welfare Conferencing within the Child Protection and Welfare System

9. Using biographical narrative interviewing methodology to research adults' experiences of disclosing childhood sexual abuse.

10. The Benefits and Challenges of Kinship Care

11. Exploring the potential of administrative data for understanding and advancing child protection and family support policy, practice and research in Ireland.

12. Contested Childhood: The Discourse and Politics of Traveller Childhood in Ireland.

13. Protective Support and Supportive Protection: Critical Reflections on Safe Practice and Safety in Supervision.

14. Exploring the multi-dimensionality of permanence and stability: Emotions, experiences and temporality in young people's discourses about long-term foster care in Ireland.

15. Convergent spaces: Intersectional analysis of ethnic minority status and childhood disability in Irish safeguarding work.

16. Working in complex contexts; mother social workers and the mothers they meet.

17. Children's lives and rights under lockdown: A Northern Irish perspective by autistic young people.

18. Explaining Self-Reported Resilience in Child-Protection Social Work: The Role of Organisational Factors, Demographic Information and Job Characteristics.

19. Making Acquaintance: Compatibility of Critical Disability Studies Conventions with Child Protection and Welfare Social Work Practice in Ireland.

20. Social Work Intervention Pathways within Child Protection: Responding to the Needs of Disabled Children in Ireland.

21. Family support in practice: voices from the field.

22. How do you solve a problem like Maria? Family complexity and institutional complications in UK social work.

23. Child protection and family support practice in Ireland: a contribution to present debates from a historical perspective.

24. Creating space to think and feel in child protection social work; a psychodynamic intervention.

25. Protection as a Human Fundamental Need: Re-Conceiving Signs of Safety for Social Work in the Republic of Ireland.

26. Theory, research and practice in child welfare: The current state of the art in social work.

27. Factors Influencing the Uptake of Research Evidence in Child Welfare: A Synthesis of Findings from Australia, Canada and Ireland.

28. A Critical Policy Analysis of Ireland's Child Protection Procedures for Schools: Emerging Policy Considerations.

29. Voice and meaning: the wisdom of Family Support veterans.

30. Inter-agency cooperation between services for children and families in Ireland: does it improve outcomes?

31. Child & Adolescent Emergency Mental Health Crisis: A Neglected Cohort

32. Transnational social workers' lived experience in statutory child protection.

33. Protective support and supportive protection for families "in the middle": Learning from the Irish context.

34. Children in immediate danger: Emergency removals in Finnish and Irish child protection.

35. Interrogating institutionalisation and child welfare: the Irish case, 1939–1991.

36. Exploring the effects of a graduate level trauma-informed care education program for child welfare professionals.

37. The family foster care system in Ireland – Advances and challenges.

38. What about the fathers? The presence and absence of the father in social work practice in England, Ireland, Norway, and Sweden—A comparative study.

39. Post-separation Fathering and Domestic Abuse: Challenges and Contradictions.

40. Why is history important at moments of transition? The case of ‘transformation’ of Irish child welfare via the new Child and Family Agency.

41. Extending the two‐process model of burnout in child protection workers: The role of resilience in mediating burnout via organizational factors of control, values, fairness, reward, workload, and community relationships.

42. Early Implementation of a Family-Centred Practice Model in Child Welfare: Findings from an Irish Case Study.

43. Responding to the support needs of front-line public health nurses who work with vulnerable families and children: a qualitative study.

44. Barriers to knowledge acquisition and utilisation in child welfare decisions: A qualitative study.

45. Co-producing innovation or innovating co-production? Responding to the contact needs of non-resident parents in the Republic of Ireland.

46. Lessons on Child Protection: A Survey of Newly Qualified Primary-Level Teachers in Ireland.

47. Child Abuse in Irish Catholic Settings: A Non-Reductionist Account.

48. Church, State and Family: The Advent of Child Guidance Clinics in Independent Ireland.

49. Adjusting ‘our notions of the nature of the State’: A political reading of Ireland’s child protection crisis.

50. Child protection in primary schools: a contradiction in terms or a potential opportunity?