Created in 2000, the Partnerships for Children and Families Project is a multi year research project directed at understanding the lives and experiences of families and children who are served by Children’s Aid Societies and children’s mental health services in Southern Ontario, Canada. The Project aims to foster improvements in existing child welfare and children’s mental health policies, delivery systems, administration and programming/interventions.

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Long-term Community Adaptation of Children and Youth Receiving Residential Mental Health Services

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Life Domain Research Report Series: School and Employment, Karen Frensch, Lirondel Hazineh, Gary Cameron, and Michele Preyde

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Life Domain Research Report Series: Social Connections and Community Conduct, Lirondel Hazineh, Karen Frensch, Michele Preyde, and Gary Cameron

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Life Domain Research Report Series: Youth and Parent Health and Well Being, Michele Preyde, Karen Frensch, Gary Cameron, and Lirondel Hazineh

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Bridging or Maintaining Distance: A Matched Comparison of Parent and Service Provider Realities (FULL REPORT), Karen Frensch and Gary Cameron

Positive Systems of Child and Family Welfare International Conference (2002)

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Child and Family Welfare in Sweden, Gunvor Andersson

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First Nations Child and Family Services and Indigenous Knowledge as a Framework for Research, Policy and Practice, Marlyn Bennett and Cindy Blackstock

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Forming and Sustaining Partnerships, Pat Schene

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Learning From Difference: Comparing Child Welfare Systems, Rachael Hetherington

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Maori Perspectives on Collaboration and Colonisation in Contemporary Aotearoa/New Zealand Child and Family Welfare Policies and Practices, Catherine Love

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Problems and Potential for Canadian Child Welfare, K. Swift and M. Callahan

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Promoting Change from ‘Child Protection’ to ‘Child and Family Welfare’: The Problems of the English System, Rachael Hetherington and Tracey Nurse

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The Plight of Paternalism in French Child Welfare and Protective Policies and Practices, Alain Grevot

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‘When One Door Shuts, Another Opens’: Turning Disadvantages into Opportunities, A.W.M. Veldkamp

Transforming Front-Line Child Welfare Practices (2010)

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Working Report #6: Values in Child Welfare Work: Perspectives of Child Welfare Service Providers in Central and Accessible Service Delivery Models, Nancy Colleen Freymond

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Working Report #8: Services and Supports (Parent Perspectives), Lirondel Hazineh, Gary Cameron, and Karen Frensch

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Transforming Front-Line Child Welfare Practice: The Impacts of Institutional Settings on Services, Employment Environments, Children, and Families (SUMMARY OF FINAL REPORT), Gary Cameron, Lirondel Hazineh, and Karen Frensch

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Transforming Front-Line Child Welfare Practice: The Impacts of Institutional Settings on Services, Employment Environments, Children, and Families (SYNTHESIS REPORT), Gary Cameron, Lirondel Hazineh, and Karen Frensch

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Working Report #1: Service Model Accessibility (Service Provider Perspectives), Lirondel Hazineh and Gary Cameron

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Working Report #2: Client and Community Relations (Service Provider Perspectives), Lirondel Hazineh and Gary Cameron

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Working Report #3: Use of Legal Measures and Formal Authority (Service Provider Perspectives), Lirondel Hazineh and Gary Cameron

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Working Report #4: Range of Services (Service Provider Perspectives), Lirondel Hazineh and Gary Cameron

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Working Report #5: Child Welfare Jobs (Service Provider Perspectives), Gary Cameron, Lirondel Hazineh, and Karen Frensch

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Working Report #7: Helping Relationships in Child Welfare (Parent Perspectives), Lirondel Hazineh, Gary Cameron, and Karen Frensch

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Retrospective Technical Report: Accessible Program Parent Survey Results from Case Opening and Follow Up (Using Retrospective Data), Karen Frensch

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Transforming Front Line Child Welfare Practice: The Impacts of Institutional Settings on Services, Employment Environments, Children, and Families, NON-RETROSPECTIVE TECHNICAL REPORT: Accessible Program and Agency Based Program Parent Survey Results from Case Opening and Follow Up, Karen Frensch, Gary Cameron, and Lirondel Hazineh