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1. Exploring the mechanisms explaining the quality of sibling relationships when children are taken into care: A qualitative study of Norwegian children.

2. Lesbian and gay individuals' path into foster parenting in Norway—Barriers and facilitators at the person and system levels.

3. Mothering and everyday life during and in the aftermath of domestic violence among women with immigrant backgrounds in Norway.

4. When standardization becomes the lens of professional practice in child welfare services.

5. The quality and developmental pathways in sibling relationships: A qualitative study of Norwegian children admitted to child welfare service care.

6. Collaboration and conversations with children in Child Welfare Services —Parents' viewpoint.

7. Stepping through the door - exploring low-threshold services in Norwegian family centres.

8. Negotiating motherhood: women with troubled upbringings and their self-conceptions as mothers.

9. "We are not weak, we just experience domestic violence"—Immigrant women's experiences of encounters with service providers as a result of domestic violence.

10. What about the fathers? The presence and absence of the father in social work practice in England, Ireland, Norway, and Sweden—A comparative study.

11. "It's our children!" Exploring intersectorial collaboration in family centres.

12. 'He didn't mean to hit mom, I think': positioning, agency and point in adolescents' narratives about domestic violence.

13. Child welfare workers' perceptions of children's participation: a comparative study of England, Norway and the USA ( California).

14. Parents in high-conflict custodial cases: negotiating shared care across households.

15. Parenting conditions in the midst of suspicion of child sexual abuse (CSA).

16. Interprofessional collaboration: self-reported successful collaboration by teachers and social workers in multidisciplinary teams.

17. Child-centric or family focused? A study of child welfare workers' perceptions of ethnic minority children in England and Norway.

18. Abused women with children or children of abused women? A study of conflicting perspectives at women's refuges in Norway.