Play is fundamental to children’s health, wellbeing and development. Yet in the modern world, their space and opportunity to play is under threat. This is the first book to look in detail at children’s play within public policy. Using the UK government’s play strategy for England (2008-10) as a deta
Policy for Play: Responding to Children's Forgotten Right
✍ Scribed by Adrian Voce
- Publisher
- Policy Press
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 208
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Play is fundamental to children’s health, wellbeing and development. Yet in the modern world, their space and opportunity to play is under threat. This is the first book to look in detail at children’s play within public policy. Using the UK government’s play strategy for England (2008-10) as a detailed case study, it explores states’ obligations to children under the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and the General Comment of 2013. It presents evidence that strategies for public health, education and even environmental sustainability would be more effective with a better-informed perspective about the nature of play and the importance of allowing children more time and space for it. The book throws down a challenge to both play advocates and governments, to make effective policy that respects, protects and fulfils children’s right to play as a priority. It is an essential tool for practitioners and campaigners around the world.
✦ Table of Contents
POLICY FOR PLAY
Contents
Who’s who
About the author
Preface
Foreword
Prologue
‘To respect, protect and fulfil’
1. ‘To play and to dream’
Restoring play to the heart of the campaign for children’s rights
2. ‘For a change’
Finding the evidence for play policy
Different perspectives on play
3. ‘Advocates for play’
Playwork’s place at the heart of the play movement
Playwork starts a long campaign
4. ‘New opportunities’
Lottery funding and the beginnings of public play policy
5. ‘A vital and vibrant city’
How devolved government in London set a benchmark for play policy
Play advocates in London make a breakthrough
6. ‘Making the case’
The call for a national play strategy
The argument for a national play strategy
7. ‘Things to do, places to go?’
How play was overlooked by children’s services reform
8. ‘Getting serious’
The national play review
9. ‘Lottery millions’
The Children’s Play Initiative
10. ‘Dirt is good’
The Play England project
11. ‘The best place in the world’
The Play Strategy for England
12. ‘Playbuilders’
Breaking the mould of the public playground
13. ‘Everyday adventures?’
Austerity brings an end to play policy in England
14. ‘Skylarks and canaries’
The legacy of the Play Strategy
15. ‘Children now’
Responding to children’s right to play: conclusions and recommendations
A cabinet minister for children
A cross-departmental plan for play
Planning policy
Traffic management
Playwork and playwork services
Childcare and extended services
Cross-professional training
Statutory play duty on local authorities
Epilogue
References
Index
Untitled
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