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Journal articles on the topic "Family Group Conference"

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Straub, Ute. "Family Group Conference." Sozial Extra 29, no. 5 (May 2005): 37–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12054-005-0050-x.

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Samuray, Sabine, and Andreas Hampe-Grosser. "Family Group Conference." Soziale Arbeit 57, no. 9 (2008): 322–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0490-1606-2008-9-322.

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Miklosko, Jozef, Emilia Bezakova, and Jan Herak. "Family Group Conference and its Role in addressing Homelessness Worldwide." Clinical Social Work and Health Intervention 8, no. 1 (March 27, 2017): 30–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.22359/cswhi_8_1_07.

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Schout, Gert, Marjolein van Dijk, Ellen Meijer, Elleke Landeweer, and Gideon de Jong. "The use of family group conferences in mental health: Barriers for implementation." Journal of Social Work 17, no. 1 (July 8, 2016): 52–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468017316637227.

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Summary The number of compulsory admissions in Dutch psychiatry has increased in the past 25 years. The reduction of coercion with Family Group Conferences in youth care has been successful. How, when and under what conditions can Family Group Conferences reduce coercion in adult psychiatry, is subject of an extensive inquiry. This paper, however, focusses on the reverse question, namely, in what circumstances can Family Group Conferences not be deployed? An answer to this question provides insights regarding situations in which Family Group Conferences may (not) be useful. Barriers in 17 cases were examined using multiple case studies. Findings The following barriers emerged: (1) the acute danger in coercion situations, the limited time available, the fear of liability and the culture of control and risk aversion in mental health care; (2) the severity of the mental state of clients leading to difficulties in decision-making and communication; (3) considering an Family Group Conference and involving familial networks as an added value in crisis situation is not part of the thinking and acting of professionals in mental health care; (4) clients and their network (who) are not open to an Family Group Conference. Applications Awareness of the barriers for Family Group Conferences can help to keep an open mind for its capacity to strengthen the partnership between clients, familial networks and professionals. The application of Family Group Conferences can help to effectuate professional and ethical values of social workers in their quest for the least coercive care.
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HOLLAND, SALLY, JONATHAN SCOURFIELD, SEAN O'NEILL, and ANDREW PITHOUSE. "Democratising the Family and the State? The Case of Family Group Conferences in Child Welfare." Journal of Social Policy 34, no. 1 (December 23, 2004): 59–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0047279404008268.

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This article discusses the potential of family group conferences to act as a liberating intervention for families traditionally controlled by the state welfare system. Family group conferences are interventions designed to remove control of decision making from professionals and allow family groups to make decisions about the welfare of one or more of their members. Using data from a qualitative evaluation of family group conferences in Wales, this article examines ‘imposed empowerment’ and social control, and the feasibility of treating ‘the family’ as a unit for state intervention. The authors propose that the family group conference approach not only has the potential to shift the balance of power between the state and client families, but that it may have the potential to democratise decision making within families. However, it is also noted that such interventions can be seen to be maintaining social control through subtle and possibly unintentional means. The article engages with sociological research and theory on democracy in the family.
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Roguski, Michael David. "The Reclamation of Whānau Decision-Making in the Context of Child Welfare. A Case Study of Iwi-Led Family Group Conferences." International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies 13, no. 1 (September 23, 2020): 86–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/ijcis.v13i1.1575.

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The Children, Young Persons and Their Families Act (1989) heralded family group conferences as an innovative mechanism to reinforce the role of family in child welfare decision-making. While many have regarded family group conferences as a culturally appropriate response, continued managerialism reflected a guise of cultural responsiveness and family involvement that has actively disempowered whānau and the young person in decision-making processes. Similar to concerns that led to the formation of the 1989 Act, institutional racism inspired Rangitāne o Wairarapa (Rangitāne) to reclaim the family group conference process, and child welfare decision-making, as an iwi function. The current study reports on the development of a family group conference practice model of one iwi (Rangitāne) as a case study of cultural reclamation. The success of the approach is juxtaposed against the iwi practice model, critical success factors and opportunities for the development of such practice models across Aotearoa New Zealand.
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Clare, Michael. "Educating family group conference coordinators: A ‘family of origin’ perspective." Children Australia 25, no. 2 (2000): 21–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1035077200009688.

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This paper considers the challenges to social work students and their educators and to graduate social workers and their supervisors, of acquiring beginning-level confidence and competence in working with ‘other people’s families’. There is a review of important educational contributions to our understanding of the necessary and sufficient preparation for ‘pure and applied’ social work theory and practice with families. In this review, the writer describes the educational rationale for a ‘Family of Origin’ workshop which has been offered to social work students at the Universities of Sussex and Western Australia and to experienced practitioners in a Perth child and family welfare agency. Finally, the writer reflects on the intellectual and the emotional dimensions of knowing and doing in family-based practice – with particular reference to Family Group Conferencing.
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Roßner, Daniel. "Upcoming SIGWEB supported conferences." ACM SIGWEB Newsletter, Winter (January 2021): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3447879.3447884.

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The Special Interest Group on Hypertext and the Web, SIGWEB was created in 1989 to support the community participating in the annual ACM Hypertext Conference. In its fourth decade, SIGWEB continues its efforts to support a wide range of communities and conferences. Recently, the Web Conference's legal and financial sponsorship was transferred to SIGWEB and thus joins the family of seven annual conferences in 2022. SIGWEB supports several specialized conferences, short courses, and workshops of different sizes, as well as the annual Hypertext Conference. SIGWEB sponsored conferences focus on timely topics in applied and computational hypertext and Web disciplines and provide a place for members and the entire applied Hypermedia and Web community to exchange ideas and to meet with and expand their network of colleagues. In this article, we provide a brief overview of SIGWEB sponsored conferences, in addition to events that are in cooperation with SIGWEB. Due to the current Corona crisis, many event organizers opted for an online conference format or allow remote participation. These conferences are marked accordingly.
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Roßner, Daniel. "Upcoming SIGWEB supported conferences." ACM SIGWEB Newsletter, Autumn (March 2021): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3460304.3460309.

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The Special Interest Group on Hypertext and the Web, SIGWEB was created in 1989 to support the community participating in the annual ACM Hypertext Conference. In its fourth decade, SIGWEB continues its efforts to support a wide range of communities and conferences. Recently, the Web Conference's legal and financial sponsorship was transferred to SIGWEB and thus joins the family of seven annual conferences in 2022. SIGWEB supports several specialized conferences, short courses, and workshops of different sizes, as well as the annual Hypertext Conference. SIGWEB sponsored conferences focus on timely topics in applied and computational hypertext and Web disciplines and provide a place for members and the entire applied Hypermedia and Web community to exchange ideas and to meet with and expand their network of colleagues. In this article, we provide a brief overview of SIGWEB sponsored conferences, in addition to events that are in cooperation with SIGWEB. Due to the current Corona crisis, many event organizers opted for an online conference format or allow remote participation. These conferences are marked accordingly.
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Roßner, Daniel. "Upcoming SIGWEB supported conferences." ACM SIGWEB Newsletter, Summer (June 2021): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3473044.3473049.

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The Special Interest Group on Hypertext and the Web, SIGWEB was created in 1989 to support the community participating in the annual ACM Hypertext Conference. In its fourth decade, SIGWEB continues its efforts to support a wide range of communities and conferences. Recently, the Web Conference's legal and financial sponsorship was transferred to SIGWEB and thus joins the family of seven annual conferences in 2022. SIGWEB supports several specialized conferences, short courses, and workshops of different sizes, as well as the annual Hypertext Conference. SIGWEB sponsored conferences focus on timely topics in applied and computational hypertext and Web disciplines and provide a place for members and the entire applied Hypermedia and Web community to exchange ideas and to meet with and expand their network of colleagues. In this article, we provide a brief overview of SIGWEB sponsored conferences, in addition to events that are in cooperation with SIGWEB. Due to the current Corona crisis, many event organizers opted for an online conference format or allow remote participation. These conferences are marked accordingly.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Family Group Conference"

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Lynch, Nessa, and n/a. "The rights of the young person in the New Zealand youth justice family group conference." University of Otago. Faculty of Law, 2009. http://adt.otago.ac.nz./public/adt-NZDU20090728.105833.

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The youth justice family group conference (FGC) is a statutory decision making process whereby the young person, their family/whanau, state officials and the victim of the offence come together to decide on a response to offending by that young person. The FGC is an integral part of the youth justice system, involving thousands of young people and their families each year. There is a considerable amount of literature available on the youth justice FGC, most notably in regard to the purported restorative justice nature of the process. However, for a legal process which involves so many young people on a daily basis, there is little information available on the due process rights of young people in the FGC. This thesis seeks to remedy this gap in the research knowledge. Firstly, this thesis establishes the theoretical framework for the rights of the young person in the youth justice system. The historical context and theoretical justification for these rights is considered, and the benchmarks for rights coming from international and national human rights standards are identified. A key theoretical issue is the application of rights to the FGC. It is argued that although the FGC differs in format from the adversarial criminal process, it remains a state process involved in resolving a breach of the criminal law, and thus the young person's rights should be safeguarded. Secondly, this thesis evaluates legislation, policy and practice relating to the rights of the young person in the FGC. Three key areas of rights are considered: legal assistance, how the offence is proved, and outcomes of the FGC. Reference is made to practice examples derived from observation of the FGC in two centres in New Zealand. Finally, as the FGC is certain to remain an integral part of the youth justice system, recommendations are made as to how legislation and practice could be improved to better safeguard the rights of young people in this process.
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MACI, FRANCESCA. "LE FAMILY GROUP CONFERENCES: IL COINVOLGIMENTO DELLE FAMIGLIE NEI PROCESSI DECISIONALI NELLA CHILD PROTECTION. ANALISI DELL'ESPERIENZA BRITANNICA." Doctoral thesis, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10280/831.

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Nei servizi di tutela del minore di frequente il lavoro sociale con le famiglie assume una connotazione fortemente sanitaria, caratterizzata dalla tendenza da parte degli operatori sociali di concentrare in capo a sé, in forza del mandato istituzionale a cui devono rispondere e in nome della loro riconosciuta expertise, il processo di aiuto, escludendo dalla scena altri soggetti significativi. Per poter realmente parlare di tutela del minore e di supporto alla famiglia è necessario assumere uno sguardo includente che coinvolga nel processo di presa di decisioni, i genitori, il minore e altre relazioni motivate a partecipare alla costruzione del benessere familiare, perché insieme si pensi ad interventi che trovino una significativa rispondenza nel mondo della vita. Le Family Group Conferences sono un modello di presa di decisioni attraverso il quale la famigli allargata (parenti, amici, vicini di casa…) predispone un Piano di protezione ed assume delle decisioni a favore di un minore che si trova in situazione di rischio o pregiudizio per tutelarlo e garantirgli una situazione di benessere. Il modello proposto dalle FGCs è ascrivibile nella categoria dei servizi relazionali perché valorizza le relazioni esistenti, ne produce delle altre e coinvolge i diretti interessati, favorendo processi di empowerment.
The social work in child protection is often characterized by a disabling and authority based work; as a matter of fact the professionals use to centralize the power in their hands, in the name of their expertise, cutting the family out of the decisions regarding their lives . This is not the right way to work to build the parents and children welfare because, if the aim is to promote a real change in families, it is necessary the involvement of the family itself in the decision making process. A family group conference (FGC) is a decision making and planning process whereby the wider family group makes plans and decision for children and young people who have been identified either by the family themselves or by service providers as being in need of s plans that will safeguard and promote their welfare It is possible to define FGC as relational service because it is based on participatory approach in which social service work together with parents, children and others important relations to find the right way to care and protect the child.
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MACI, FRANCESCA. "LE FAMILY GROUP CONFERENCES: IL COINVOLGIMENTO DELLE FAMIGLIE NEI PROCESSI DECISIONALI NELLA CHILD PROTECTION. ANALISI DELL'ESPERIENZA BRITANNICA." Doctoral thesis, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10280/831.

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Nei servizi di tutela del minore di frequente il lavoro sociale con le famiglie assume una connotazione fortemente sanitaria, caratterizzata dalla tendenza da parte degli operatori sociali di concentrare in capo a sé, in forza del mandato istituzionale a cui devono rispondere e in nome della loro riconosciuta expertise, il processo di aiuto, escludendo dalla scena altri soggetti significativi. Per poter realmente parlare di tutela del minore e di supporto alla famiglia è necessario assumere uno sguardo includente che coinvolga nel processo di presa di decisioni, i genitori, il minore e altre relazioni motivate a partecipare alla costruzione del benessere familiare, perché insieme si pensi ad interventi che trovino una significativa rispondenza nel mondo della vita. Le Family Group Conferences sono un modello di presa di decisioni attraverso il quale la famigli allargata (parenti, amici, vicini di casa…) predispone un Piano di protezione ed assume delle decisioni a favore di un minore che si trova in situazione di rischio o pregiudizio per tutelarlo e garantirgli una situazione di benessere. Il modello proposto dalle FGCs è ascrivibile nella categoria dei servizi relazionali perché valorizza le relazioni esistenti, ne produce delle altre e coinvolge i diretti interessati, favorendo processi di empowerment.
The social work in child protection is often characterized by a disabling and authority based work; as a matter of fact the professionals use to centralize the power in their hands, in the name of their expertise, cutting the family out of the decisions regarding their lives . This is not the right way to work to build the parents and children welfare because, if the aim is to promote a real change in families, it is necessary the involvement of the family itself in the decision making process. A family group conference (FGC) is a decision making and planning process whereby the wider family group makes plans and decision for children and young people who have been identified either by the family themselves or by service providers as being in need of s plans that will safeguard and promote their welfare It is possible to define FGC as relational service because it is based on participatory approach in which social service work together with parents, children and others important relations to find the right way to care and protect the child.
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Müller, Monique [Verfasser], and Hans-Jürgen [Akademischer Betreuer] Kerner. "Family Group Conference (FGC) und Täter-Opfer-Ausgleich (TOA) : Restorative Justice in Neuseeland und in Deutschland / Monique Müller ; Betreuer: Hans-Jürgen Kerner." Tübingen : Universitätsbibliothek Tübingen, 2017. http://d-nb.info/1199547077/34.

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Stevens, Martin John. "Family group conferences, reconstruction works for family problems? : constructing family perspectives on the outcomes of family group conferences." Thesis, University of Portsmouth, 2002. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.397042.

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Gal, Tali, and tali gal@anu edu au. "Victims to Partners: Child Victims and Restorative Justice." The Australian National University. Research School of Social Sciences, 2006. http://thesis.anu.edu.au./public/adt-ANU20061114.100521.

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Children belong to one of the most vulnerable population groups to crime. Child victims of crime have to overcome the difficulties emerging from their victimization as well as those resulting from their participation in the adversarial criminal justice process. Child victims are typically treated by legal systems as either mere witnesses -- prosecutorial instruments -- or as objects of protection. Children's human rights and their needs beyond immediate protection are typically ignored. ¶ This thesis combines an examination of children's human rights (articulated largely in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child) with a review of psycho-social literature on children's needs. It integrates the two disciplines thus creating a `needs-rights' model regarding child victims. This model is then used to evaluate the criminal justice process and its successes (and failures) in meeting the needs and rights of child victims. Such an integrated needs-rights evaluation identifies not only the difficulties associated with testifying in court and being interviewed multiple times. It goes beyond these topical issues, and uncovers other shortcomings of the current legal system such as the lack of true participation of child victims in the decision-making process, the neglect of rehabilitative and developmental interests of victimized children, and the inherent inability of the adversarial process to seek proactively the best interests of child victims. ¶ The thesis further explores an alternative to the criminal justice process -- that of restorative justice -- and examines its applicability to child victims. Unlike the criminal justice paradigm, restorative justice fosters the equal participation of the stakeholders (in particular victims, offenders and their communities), and focuses on their emotional and social rehabilitation while respecting their human rights. To explore the suitability of restorative justice for child victims, five restorative justice schemes from New Zealand, Australia and Canada and their evaluation studies are reviewed. Each of these schemes has included child victims, and most of them have dealt with either sexual assaults of children or family violence and abuse. Yet each of the evaluated schemes illuminates different concerns and proposes varying strategies for meeting the needs-rights of child victims. ¶ While these schemes demonstrate the significant potential of restorative justice to better address the full scope of the needs and rights of child victims, they uncover emerging concerns as well. Therefore, in the last part of the thesis, the needs-rights model is used once again to derive subsidiary principles for action, to maximize the benefits of restorative justice for child victims and minimize the related risks. A complex set of needs and rights is managed by a method of grouping them into needs-rights clusters and deriving from them simple heuristics for practitioners to follow. This clustering method of needs-rights-heuristics is a methodological contribution of the research to the psychology of law.
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Hoy, Michael Anthony. "The participation promise of family group conferencing - theory or practice? : a qualitative comparison study of children's participation in family group conferences and child protection case conferences." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 2013. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.602545.

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This research was based on the fundamental right of children and young people to be e involved in decisions that affect their lives. It compared the participation experiences of young people who were involved in two types of family intervention within a Health and Social Care Trust in Northern Ireland. The interventions were the Family Group Conference and the Child Protection Case Conference, both of which have a requirement to facilitate the participation of young people. The research involved twenty four young people in semi-structured interviews and four focus groups of parents and professionals. The methodology was influenced by a participatory design of peer research. This involved the establishment of a Research Advisory Group made up of five young people who also had experience of a range of meetings with Social Services. This group of young people were active participants in the research design, implementation and review of this study. The study found that the Family Group Conference offers a high level of participation experience for young people which was lacking in Case Conference. It did not however follow that outcomes from Family Group Conferencing were more favourable from the young person's perspective with more positive results being seen from Case Conferences. The research concludes that both types of intervention have valuable lessons to learn from each other and identifies a range of individual, systemic and organisational influences on participation opportunities for young people.
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Zernova, Margarita. "Restorative justice : aspirations of proponents and experiences of participants in family group conferences." Thesis, University of Hull, 2005. http://hydra.hull.ac.uk/resources/hull:6986.

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Proponents of restorative justice aspire to create a radical alternative to the 'traditional' way of thinking about - and responding to - crime. This thesis will examine many of the key aspirations of restorative justice advocates. It will do so on the basis of critical analysis of restorative justice literature and the evidence collected in the course of an empirical study, which involved interviews with participants in family group conferences. The thesis will ask: - How realistic are the aspirations of restorative justice campaigners? - What happens when restorative justice ideals are pursued in practice? - Can restorative justice, as practised within one restorative justice project, claim the mantle of a victim-centred, lay-oriented, empowering, voluntary justice and present a true alternative to the existing paradigms of justice? - What insights can lay participants in restorative justice interventions bring into the debate about restorative justice? - Are there problems, tensions and dangers - highlighted by this empirical study - inherent in the current development of restorative justice? This thesis will demonstrate the existence of a significant gap between aspirations of proponents and practical realities of restorative justice. It will suggest that this gap is unlikely to be minimised, unless restorative justice advocates radically re-consider and alter the direction in which restorative justice is presently evolving. Some suggestions will be made indicating what could be done to minimise the gap. This thesis will critically analyse some important debates among restorative justice advocates. A particular focus will be on the debate concerning the relationship between restorative justice and the criminal justice system. The implications of the reliance of restorative justice on the state justice system will be examined in the light of empirical data, and it will be argued that the dependence of restorative justice on the criminal justice system is very problematic and needs to be avoided. It will be suggested that some of the present debates concerning the relationship between restorative justice and the state justice system need to be re-focused and new ones need to be opened. In the light of empirical findings and on the basis of theoretical arguments, the thesis will criticise the tendency of certain restorative justice advocates to pre-define the objectives of restorative justice, in particular, make restorative justice operate in the name of reparation of harm. Dangers inherent in restricting the focus and goals of restorative justice will be examined. Through empirical analysis and theoretical reflections, the thesis will identify some other serious dangers and problems inherent in the current development of restorative justice. One major danger is that at present restorative justice may serve to individualise, neutralise and quickly and effectively expunge from the society conflicts with social-structural roots, and thereby prevent a possibility of challenges to social inequalities and injustices. Another major danger is that restorative justice employs its techniques of power to enable the state to govern its subjects at a distance, in a masked fashion, and, consequently, to minimise resistance to the state power and maximise regulatory efficiency. This thesis will suggest radically changing the direction in which restorative justice is developing, which might help avoid some of the present dangers.
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Filippi, Jessica. "Droit pénal des mineurs et justice restaurative. Approche comparée franco-belge." Thesis, Pau, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015PAUU2004.

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La présente recherche porte sur les rapports entre droit pénal des mineurs et justice restaurative dans le cadre d’une approche comparative entre la France et la Belgique. Au-delà de la révélation de similitudes et de différences entre les deux pays dans ces domaines, la recherche aborde également les difficultés présentées par la France et la Belgique dans l’acceptation de la justice restaurative en droit pénal des mineurs et de son développement au sein des institutions judiciaires. Par l’étude des raisons qui ont conduit la France à manquer le tournant restauratif et de celles ayant permis, en Belgique, l’implantation de la justice restaurative dans le droit pénal des mineurs, des points d’ancrage sont relevés de nature à permettre son épanouissement dans l’ordonnance du 2 février 1945. Une expérimentation dans un service éducatif de réparation pénale a été menée avec le souci de prendre en compte des problématiques intéressant le service lui-même (logiques actuarielles, prudentielles, financières, idéologies professionnelles, craintes diverses). L’analyse des pratiques souligne que les services de réparation pénale, inscrits dans une rationalité managériale du traitement du phénomène criminel juvénile, sont limités dans la mise en œuvre des démarches de justice restaurative. Il s’avère également que quelques prises en compte du mineur et des modalités de l’exécution de la mesure envisagée par les éducateurs facilitent (approche psycho-criminologique du passage à l’acte inscrit dans une dimension psycho-socio-éducative de la réparation) ou bien inhibent (approche criminologique de l’acte inscrit dans une dimension rétributive de la réparation) des programmes de justice restaurative. Pour autant, quand bien même la pratique facilite une telle expérimentation, lorsque les éducateurs disposent de mission de « réparation-directe » notamment, des obstacles d’ordre idéologique s’observent au niveau de l’accueil, du démarchage et de la participation de la victime. Il demeure cependant essentiel de souligner que, par la présentation des principes et des promesses de la Justice restaurative aux éducateurs rencontrés, les écueils identifiés tombent, principalement quant à la présence de la victime lors de la mise en œuvre de la réparation pénale directe. Une telle évolution des postures professionnelles augure d’une intégration harmonieuse prochaine des démarches de justice restaurative en droit pénal des mineurs
This research focuses on the juvenile criminal law and restorative justice in a comparative approach between France and Belgium. Beyond revealing the similarities and differences of these countries in these fields, the research also carters to the difficulties encountered by France and Belgium in the acceptance of restorative justice in juvenile criminal law and its development in the judicial institutions. By studying the reasons that led France to miss the “turning” of restorative justice and those enabled, in Belgium enabled, the implementation of restorative justice in the criminal law for minors, anchor points have been identified for its development in the order of 2 February 1945. Subsequently, an experiment in youth justice service on the reparation measures was led considering difficulties which concern the service itself (actuarial logic, supervisory, financial, professional ideologies and fears). Our analysis of practices in the youth justice services on the reparation measures, reveals that the experimentation of restorative justice is limited by a managerial rationality treatment of juvenile criminal phenomenon. Also, some of the minor approaches and their implementation in the measure facilitate (psycho-criminological approach to acting out part and a psycho-socio-educational dimension in reparation) or inhibit (criminological approach to act itself and a retributive dimension in reparation) restorative justice programs. However, even if the practice facilitates experimentation and that educators apply “direct reparation”, ideological barriers remain in dealing with victims. However, it remains essential to underline that, thanks to the presentation of the principles and promises of restorative justice educators met, the identified pitfalls fall, mainly with the presence of the victim during the implementation of “direct reparation”. Such a development professional postures omen a harmonious integration of next restorative justice approaches in juvenile criminal law
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Longclaws, Lyle N. "Application of the family group conference to the pre-disposition report process in youth courts in Manitoba." 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/1993/23012.

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Books on the topic "Family Group Conference"

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Lupton, Carol. Family planning?: An evaluation of the Family Group Conference model. Portsmouth: Social Services Research and Information Unit, 1995.

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McGrath, Jim. Diamond House Family Resource Centre family group conference: An overview. [Dungannon: Armagh & Dungannon Trust], 1999.

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1966-, Nixon Paul, ed. Empowering practice?: A critical appraisal of the family group conference approach. Bristol, UK: Policy Press, 1999.

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Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, inc., ed. Index to recovery in conference-approved literature. New York (P.O. Box 862, Midtown Station, New York, 10018-0862): Al-Anon Family Group Headquarters, 1989.

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Maci, Francesca. Lavorare con le famiglie nella tutela minorile: Il modello delle Family group conference. Trento: Erickson, 2011.

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Family Group Decision Making National Roundtable and International Evaluation Conference (1999 Seattle, Wash.). 1999 Family Group Decision Making National Roundtable and International Evaluation Conference: Summary of proceedings, Seattle, WA, May 12, 13 & 14, 1999. Edited by Merkel-Holguín Lisa A, Alsop Robyn, and American Humane Association. Children's Division. Englewood, Colo: American Humane Association, Children's Division, 2000.

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Jaafar, Jas Laile Suzana, and Sherri McCarthy, eds. Building Asian families and communities in the 21st century: Selected proceedings of the 2nd Asian Psychological Association Conference, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, June, 2008. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Pub., 2009.

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Henwood, Carolyn. New Zealand's gift to the world: To tatou taonga : mai Aotearoa ki te ao : the youth justice family group conference. Wellington: The Henwood Trust, 2014.

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Stevens, Martin John. Family group conferences: Reconstruction works for family problems : constructing family perpectives on the outcomes of family group conferences. Portsmouth: University of Portsmouth, 2003.

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Lupton, Carol. Family outcomes: Following through on Family Group Conferences. Portsmouth: Social Services Research and Information Unit, 1995.

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Book chapters on the topic "Family Group Conference"

1

Früchtel, Frank, and Anna-Maria Halibrand. "Family Group Conference / Familienrat." In Restorative Justice, 75–89. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-10179-4_6.

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Fox, Darrell. "Family Group Conference: Models and Processes." In Family Group Conferencing with Children and Young People, 9–25. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71492-9_2.

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Fox, Darrell. "Findings Pre-conference: Questions." In Family Group Conferencing with Children and Young People, 155–71. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71492-9_10.

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Fox, Darrell. "Theories of Power: Family Group Conference and Advocacy Approaches." In Family Group Conferencing with Children and Young People, 93–120. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71492-9_7.

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Fox, Darrell. "Findings Pre-conference: Demographics, Preparation and Referral and Gatekeeping." In Family Group Conferencing with Children and Young People, 121–40. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71492-9_8.

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Fox, Darrell. "Findings Pre-conference: Evolution of FGC: Division of Roles, Engagement and Participation." In Family Group Conferencing with Children and Young People, 141–54. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71492-9_9.

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Fox, Darrell. "Findings the Conference: Timeframes, Attendance and Focus, Family Time, the Plan, Follow Up." In Family Group Conferencing with Children and Young People, 173–95. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71492-9_11.

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Gal, Tali. "Family group conferences in child protection." In Global Reflections on Children's Rights and the Law, 115–27. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003131144-16.

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de Roo, Annie, and Rob Jagtenberg. "Private Justice in the Domain of Family Law: The Place of Family Group Conferences Within the Range of ADR Methods." In Transformation of Civil Justice, 159–71. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97358-6_9.

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Kriener, Martina, and Peter Hansbauer. "Family Group Conference–Konzepte:." In Soziale Arbeit im Dialog gestalten, 159–74. Verlag Barbara Budrich, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvdf06rm.16.

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Conference papers on the topic "Family Group Conference"

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Pflegerl, J. "Family Group Conference im Kontext der Betreuung älterer Menschen." In 23. wissenschaftliche Tagung der Österreichischen Gesellschaft für Public Health (ÖGPH). © Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0040-1709046.

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Mogharrab, Alireza, and Carman Neustaedter. "Family Group Chat: Family Needs to Manage Contact and Conflict." In CHI '20: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3334480.3382872.

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Faris, Ihsan Nur Iman, Dian Budiarti, and Andrian Permadi. "Emojis in Indonesian Intergenerational Family WhatsApp Group." In Thirteenth Conference on Applied Linguistics (CONAPLIN 2020). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210427.033.

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Xiang, Fan, Shunshan Zhu, Zhigang Wang, Kevin Maher, Yi Liu, Yilin Zhu, Kaixi Chen, and Zhiqiang Liang. "Enhanced family tree." In SIGGRAPH '20: Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques Conference. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3386567.3388570.

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RAMOND, P. "THE FAMILY GROUP IN GRAND UNIFIED THEORIES." In Proceedings of the International Conference on the Seesaw Mechanism. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789812702210_0020.

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Wu, Huanmei, Parth Kothiya, Aamir khan, and Jiannan Liu. "Family-HealthVault: A Group Caring and PHI Sharing Framework among Family Members." In 2019 IEEE International Conference on Healthcare Informatics (ICHI). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ichi.2019.8904613.

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Hsieh, Rex, Yuya Mochizuki, Takaya Asano, Marika Higashida, and Akihiko Shirai. ""Real baby - real family"." In SIGGRAPH '17: Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques Conference. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3084822.3084830.

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Wang, Chenlan, Mehrdad Moharrami, Kun Jin, David Kempe, P. Jeffrey Brantingham, and Mingyan Liu. "Structural Stability of a Family of Group Formation Games." In 2021 60th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cdc45484.2021.9683571.

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Wei, Xiaoge, Dan Zhang, and Fangfang Li. "Study on Family Group Evacuation of High-rise Residential Buildings." In 2019 9th International Conference on Fire Science and Fire Protection Engineering (ICFSFPE). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icfsfpe48751.2019.9055878.

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Troshkina, I. "KHAKASS ETHNIC GROUP AND ITS FAMILY: RECONSTRUCTION OF HISTORICAL DYNAMICS." In Ancient cultures of Mongolia, Southern Siberia and Northern China: Transactions of the XIth International Conference (September 8–11, 2021, Abakan). Institute for the History of Material Culture of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31600/978-5-907298-19-4.348-351.

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Reports on the topic "Family Group Conference"

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Jacobson, Jodi. Family, Gender, and Population Policy: Views from the Middle East. Population Council, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy1994.1005.

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This paper explores the relevance of international debates to the realities of the Middle East, an important but understudied region that has often been subject to stereotyping. The region’s wealth of traditions and diverse contemporary experience offer insights to those who venture beyond the surface appearance. This paper provides a broad introduction to the connections between family, gender, and population policy in the Middle East. It is based on studies by a diverse group of Middle East scholars and the discussions they generated in Cairo at an international symposium sponsored by the Population Council in February 1994. The paper was written prior to the historic UN International Conference on Population and Development in Egypt, in the hope both of increasing understanding of an important region of the world and refining our grasp of international issues.
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Huntington, Dale. Meeting women's health care needs after abortion. Population Council, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh2000.1036.

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Women who seek emergency treatment for abortion complications—bleeding, infection, and injuries to the reproductive tract system—should be a priority group for reproductive health care programs. These women often receive poor-quality services that do not address their multiple health needs. They may be discharged without counseling on postoperative recuperation, family planning (FP), or other reproductive health (RH) issues. Women who have had an induced abortion due to an unwanted pregnancy are likely to have a repeat abortion unless they receive appropriate FP counseling and services. Preventing repeat unsafe abortions is important for RH programs because it saves women's lives, protects women’s health, and reduces the need for costly emergency services for abortion complications. At the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development, the world's governments called for improvements in postabortion medical services. As part of the resulting international postabortion care initiative, the Population Council’s Operations Research and Technical Assistance projects worked collaboratively to conduct research on interventions to improve postabortion care. This brief summarizes the major findings of this research and relevant studies by other international organizations.
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Family, Gender, and Population Policy: Views from the Middle East [Arabic]. Population Council, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy1994.1006.

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This paper explores the relevance of international debates to the realities of the Middle East, an important but understudied region that has often been subject to stereotyping. The region’s wealth of traditions and diverse contemporary experience offer insights to those who venture beyond the surface appearance. This paper provides a broad introduction to the connections between family, gender, and population policy in the Middle East. It is based on studies by a diverse group of Middle East scholars and the discussions they generated in Cairo at an international symposium sponsored by the Population Council in February 1994. The paper was written prior to the historic UN International Conference on Population and Development in Egypt, in the hope both of increasing understanding of an important region of the world and refining our grasp of international issues.
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INOPAL II Final Report. Population Council, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/rh1996.1008.

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The goal of the Population Council's “Investigación Operacional en Planificación Familiar y Atención Materno-Infantil para América Latina y el Caribe” (INOPAL) program was to conduct operations research and provide technical assistance to improve the coverage, quality, and sustainability of family planning (FP) services in Latin America and the Caribbean. INOPAL II was the successor to INOPAL I (1984–1989). Like its predecessor, INOPAL II was supported by a contract from the USAID Office of Population, when it was replaced by a new USAID-funded project, INOPAL III. INOPAL II objectives included: expanding access to FP services, improving the operations of programs by making them more efficient, increasing access to the full range of contraceptive methods, providing more services to special population groups, and improving program quality. INOPAL II had offices in Bolivia; Guatemala; Haiti; Honduras; Mexico City, Mexico; and Lima, Peru. Dissemination activities included newsletters, conferences, handbooks, and publications. In addition to reporting on the activities carried out by the INOPAL II program, this report summarizes major research findings and discusses the effect of individual operations research subprojects on FP programs.
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