95 research outputs found
Global Innovations in Measurement and Evaluation
We researched the latest developments in theory and practice in measurement and evaluation. And we found that new thinking, techniques, and technology are influencing and improving practice. This report highlights 8 developments that we think have the greatest potential to improve evaluation and programme design, and the careful collection and use of data. In it, we seek to inform and inspire—to celebrate what is possible, and encourage wider application of these ideas
Childcare and early years survey 2007: parents’ use, views and experiences
The evidence suggests overall that the Ten Year Childcare Strategy has not had as
much impact as intended, particularly in relation to the most disadvantaged children.
Nevertheless, policy plans such as the extension of the free entitlement and the roll
out of the Extended Schools programme are likely to contribute to a higher take-up of
childcare by families. This report only provides an initial update on parents’ views and
experiences of childcare and early years provision. The survey includes a wealth of
data and there is a great deal more to explore through secondary analysis as well as
qualitative research to better understand the complexity of the decisions parents
face
Honor-Based Abuse in England and Wales: Who Does What to Whom?
Key findings are presented from an empirical study profiling 1,474 cases of honor-based abuse (HBA) known to police and victim services in England and Wales. Thematic and quantitative (regression) analyses were used to investigate whether and how HBA differed from other forms of domestic abuse and forced marriage. A new typology of HBA is proposed, based principally on the relationship(s) between victim and perpetrator(s). Interpreted within an overarching lens of gender-based violence, it is argued that Type 1 (partner abuse) and Type 3 (partner plus family abuse) are culturally specific forms of domestic abuse, whereas Type 2 (family abuse) is distinct
A moral panic? The problematization of forced marriage in British newspapers
This paper examines the British media’s construction of forced marriage as an urgent social problem in a context where other forms of violence against women are not similarly problematised. A detailed analysis of four British newspapers over a ten-year period demonstrates that media reporting of forced marriage constitutes a moral panic in that it is constructed as a cultural problem that threatens Britain’s social order rather than as a specific form of violence against women. Thus, the current problematisation of forced marriage restricts discursive spaces for policy debates and hinders attempts to respond to this problem as part of broader efforts to tackle violence against women
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