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1. Trauma then and now: Implications of adoption reform for First Nations children.

2. Restoring Children From Out‐of‐Home Care: Insights From an Aboriginal‐Led Community Forum.

3. The role of the voluntary, community and social enterprise sector in Early Help: Critical reflections from embedded social care research.

4. Adapting private family time in child protective services decision‐making processes.

5. Convergent spaces: Intersectional analysis of ethnic minority status and childhood disability in Irish safeguarding work.

6. The child in child protection: Invisible and unheard.

7. Supervision as a Dispersed Practice: Exploring the Creation of Supervisory Spaces in Day‐to‐Day Social Work Practice.

8. Measuring the ratio of true‐positive to false‐positive judgements made by child and family social workers in England: A case vignette study.

9. Child protection social workers in Italy and the Covid‐19 challenges: Redefining services to support children and their families.

10. 'Wishes and feelings': Misunderstandings and missed opportunities for participation in child protection proceedings.

11. Soft, small, malleable, and slow: Corporeal form and movement in social workers' and police officers' talk about practice in a Multi-Agency Safeguarding Hub.

12. The nature and culture of social work with children and families in long‐term casework: Findings from a qualitative longitudinal study.

13. Staff experience of a new approach to family safeguarding in Oxfordshire Children's Social Care Services.

14. Evaluating the impact of a community‐based livelihood intervention on child protection: A mixed method approach.

15. Being child‐centred: Factors that facilitate professional judgement and decision‐making in child protection.

16. The process of disclosing child abuse: a study of Swedish Social Services protection in child abuse cases.

17. The tipping point: fateful moments in child protection.

18. Absent presence: the ongoing impact of men's violence on the mother-child relationship.

19. An analysis of Ofsted inspection reports for children's social care services in England.

20. Collaborating with parents during intervention with parental agreement: Practitioner perspectives on procedural justice.

21. An exploration of how gender stereotypes influence how practitioners identify and respond to victims (or those at risk) of child sexual exploitation.

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

23. The social support systems of mothers with problematic substance use in their infant's first year.

24. Theory, research and practice in child welfare: The current state of the art in social work.

25. Using outcome measures in child protection work.

26. Exploring approaches to child welfare in contexts of domestic violence and abuse: Family group conferences.

27. Judging parental competence: A cross‐country analysis of judicial decision makers' written assessment of mothers' parenting capacities in newborn removal cases.

28. 'The lion's den': Social workers' understandings of risk to infants.

29. Social worker or social administrator? Findings from a qualitative case study of a child protection social work team.

30. Exploring drivers of demand for child protection services in an English local authority.

31. Protective support and supportive protection for families "in the middle": Learning from the Irish context.

32. Children in immediate danger: Emergency removals in Finnish and Irish child protection.

33. The concept of a child within sub‐Saharan African migrant homes: Reconciling culture and child rights.

34. Collaborating with families in differential responses: practitioners' views.

35. How professionals talk about complex cases: a critical discourse analysis.

36. Social workers' attitudes towards female victims of domestic violence: A study in one English local authority.

37. Challenges of operationalizing trauma‐informed practice in child protection services in New Zealand.

38. Five years in care: documented lives and time trajectories in child welfare.

39. Defending parenthood: A look at parents' legal argumentation in Norwegian care order appeal proceedings.

40. How is supervision recorded in child and family social work? An analysis of 244 written records of formal supervision.

41. Assessment of the developmental needs of children in need: Estonian child protective workers' case reflections.

42. Less than human: a qualitative study into the experience of parents involved in the child protection system.

43. Enablers of help-seeking for deaf and disabled children following abuse and barriers to protection: a qualitative study.

44. Is it 'fair'? Representation of children, young people and parents in an adversarial court system.

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

46. Trial and error: attending to language barriers in child welfare service provision from the perspective of frontline workers.

47. Inequalities in child welfare intervention rates: the intersection of deprivation and identity.

48. Weighing it up: family maintenance discourses in NGO child protection decision-making in Aotearoa/ New Zealand.

49. What social workers do in performing child protection work: evidence from research into face-to-face practice.

50. Matching children and substitute homes: some theoretical and empirical notions.