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The Climbie Inquiry - Context and Critique

Authors :
Judith M Masson
Source :
Journal of Law and Society. 33:221-243
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Wiley, 2006.

Abstract

The inquiry into the death of Victoria Climbie was portrayed as the most wide-ranging inquiry into failure to protect a child. It was instrumental in the development of the new safeguarding agenda and joined-up children's services in the Children Act 2004. Both its process and outcome appear to fit with New Labour's agenda for joined-up government. A social constructionist analysis reveals it as a narrower project which ignored key issues and failed to make links between government policy, the law, and local authority action. Three issues -i) parental responsibility, ii) treating intra-family child abuse as a crime, and Hi) local authorities' responsibilities for family support -exemplify the inquiry's restrictive approach and the impossibility of joined-up services if central government seeks to retain authority without taking responsibility. Despite its success in changing policy, the Climbie Report shows again the inadequacy of such inquiries as a basis for reform. Language: en

Details

ISSN :
14676478 and 0263323X
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Law and Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6e77dfd3b0081c2d1385c7ad001f284a