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Keywords: respect
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Published: 20 June 2024
... narratives empathy immersion London respect trust detention centres concluding remarks relationships relational power dynamics agenda soft power communication collaboration common ground relational reciprocity trust respect empathy The previous chapter examined the constructive influence...
Chapter
Contemporary issues for preventative child welfare
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Kate Morris and others
Published: 25 February 2009
... in understandings about the impact of early intervention on parenting and consequently on children's trajectories. Another example was the ‘Respect’ initiative, launched in 2004 in response to troublesome children, adults, and families, which set out a new approach to tackling problem families through intensive...
Chapter
Published: 27 June 2012
... they are treated at the doctors surgery or when they pay a bill at the bank can make an important impact on their well-being. The concept of ‘respect’ has been invoked in the context of policies intended to counteract the perceived incivility of public behaviour – particularly amongst young people. A related...
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‘A Jekyll in the classroom, a Hyde in the street’: Queen Victoria’s hooligans
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Geoffrey Pearson
Published: 15 April 2009
...This chapter discusses respect and behaviour within the perspective of the streets of London. It traces Old England and Victorian values from narratives and accounts that illustrate the streets and street life of the Victorian and Edwardian society where the once innocent street games of children...
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‘You lookin’ at me?’ Discourses of respect and disrespect, identity and violence
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Peter Squires
Published: 15 April 2009
...This chapter develops an argument on the awkward parallels and contrasts between the uses of a discourse of ‘respect’ as a policy tool and the notions of ‘street respect’. There seems to be an irony in the fact that the issue of ‘respect governance’ emerged at a time when a street discourse...
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Morality, controversy and emotion in schools
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Carol Vincent
Published: 01 July 2019
... constraints for teachers, on conducting what Cantle has called ‘dangerous conversations’. Chapter 5 also explores the priorities of teacher-respondents, their interpretation of the FBV policy to fit with their emphasis on developing students’ moral behaviours, especially mutual respect, and the commonalities...
Chapter
Published: 11 June 2008
...This text, which is about the anti-social behaviour (ASB) phenomenon in the United Kingdom, aims to capture, in a single volume, a wide range of positions that one might take up in respect of the ‘anti-social behaviour question’. The chapters chart the first emergence of the issue, the differing...
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Towards a balanced and practical approach to anti-social behaviour management
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Gillian Mayfield and Andy Mills
Published: 11 June 2008
... for practitioners around the country (as identified by research undertaken by the National Community Safety Network); and new moves to address the causes, as well as the symptoms, of ASB (the government's Respect Agenda and the Positive Approaches group). The first section examines the strategic approach to ASB...
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The responsibility of respecting justice: an open challenge to Tony Blair’s successors
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Dawn E. Stephen
Published: 11 June 2008
... deficiencies in the bequest of ‘respect’ by responding to Blair's own challenge, announced in his speech to accompany the launch of the Respect Action Plan. Fortified by the intention to further strengthen summary powers and civil measures, the remedies outlined in the Respect Action Plan — dealing...
Chapter
Published: 11 June 2014
...This chapter elucidates how the Game is played by young people who strategise by earning respect and building a reputation. This process starts young people in the social field. The declining respect for Olders and adults is addressed alongside how young people seek to fast-track their respect...
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Can the recruitment of ex-offenders enhance offender engagement? An assessment of the London Probation Trust’s engagement worker role
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Nigel Hosking and John Rico
Published: 20 December 2017
...Research has long established that the most effective strategy for reducing reoffending is to develop collaborative relationships with service users. Practitioners need to exhibit empathy, mutual respect, and an appreciation for the life, perspectives, and needs of service users. However...
Chapter
Published: 08 July 2009
... and she was doing it twice a week. Maybe in some ways, Sensei finds her identity within ju-jitsu because there is no differentiation within religion or anything like that. The principal thing in ju-jitsu is that one should show respect to everything and everyone. Sensei Mumtaz Khan Ju-Jitsu club respect...
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Giving respect: the ‘new’ responsibilities of youth in the transition towards citizenship
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Alan France and Jo Meredith
Published: 15 April 2009
...There has been a growing political anxiety that respect among the young is becoming a major problem. Although youthful immorality and poor behaviour has been a major component of the ‘youth question’ for quite a time, there is a perception that is has increased in recent years. Equally...
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‘The feeling’s mutual’: respect as the basis for cooperative interaction
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Peter Somerville
Published: 15 April 2009
...This chapter reviews the current understanding of mutual respect and recognition, identifying it as a general form of cooperative interaction and identifying is as practices of civility, sociability and intimacy. The chapter also differentiates the ‘thick’ and ‘thin’ variants of civility...
Chapter
Published: 15 April 2009
...This chapter discusses city living which is considered as a contest of behavioural expectations, with different groups being more or less willing to have their expectations challenged. It considers the relationships between respect and plurality, urban aesthetics and consumerism and performance...
Chapter
Published: 15 April 2009
...In historical terms, the search for ‘respect’ is nothing new. However, in the first decade of the twentieth century, the search for respect has reached a momentum unlike before. It has become an important issue in the UK and has become the focus of government policies. This unprecedented interest...
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Conclusions
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Andrew Millie
Published: 21 September 2016
... approach to criminology. There is particular emphasis on Kantian philosophy, especially regarding human dignity. Relatedly, the book has drawn on ideas concerning the Golden Rule and Paul Ricoeur’s (1990) work on Christian theology and an ‘economy of gift.’ Building on the common theme of dignity, respect...
Chapter
Published: 01 April 2020
...The concluding chapter summarises the findings, and elaborates on issues of situated respect, identity, and on the psychosocial perpetuation of an immersive violent habitus. In light of these findings, I problematise the extent to which boxing is still deemed relevant for youth policy and practice...
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On the margins of inclusion
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David M. Smith
Published: 21 September 2005
... maximisation featured prominently in the respondents' accounts of the imperatives influencing labour market behaviour. It opines that in the absence of employment that provides any intrinsic satisfaction or alternative means of self-respect, the material rewards of employment are central since they provide...
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Rethinking some youth worker ‘tales’
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Mike Seal and Pete Harris
Published: 14 September 2016
... to such an extent that challenging their violent behaviour falls off the agenda. They also argue that youth workers need to develop greater conceptual clarity, especially around notions of respect and trust. With the former, for example, workers may need to make distinctions between earned, intrinsic respect...