Drawing on unique access to prominent policy makers including ministers, senior civil servants, local authority directors, and the leaders of children’s sector NGOs, Purcell re-examines two decades of children’s services reform under both Labour and Conservative-led governments.
He closely examines the origins of Labour’s Every Child Matters programme, the Munro review and more recent Conservative reforms affecting child and family social workers to reassess the impact of high profile child abuse cases, including Victoria Climbié and Baby P, and reveal the party political drivers of successive reform.Drawing on unique access to prominent policy makers, Purcell re-examines two decades of children’s services reform under recent Labour and Conservative-led governments. He examines the origins of Labour’s Every Child Matters programme, the Munro Review and more recent Conservative reforms affecting child and family social workers. The book also reassesses the impact of high-profile child abuse cases including Victoria Climbié and Baby P, revealing the political drivers of subsequent reforms.