Professor Henderson has, from different angles, examined the 'conventional wisdom' that residential care for children and youth is inherently harmful to their development. He concludes that this 'wisdom' is scientifically completely unsustainable. As professionals (in training), policymakers and scientists, we have been enriched with a very convincing book.
Erik J. Knorth Professor, University of Groningen, the Netherlands
This text fills an important gap in the literature on residential care. It offers significant new analyses based on an extensive review of relevant literature. This challenge to the "conventional wisdom" is overdue and a critically important addition to the literature.
James P. Anglin PhD, Emeritus Professor, University of Victoria
A must-read corrective to conventional wisdom on residential child care. Henderson provides valuable analysis and perspective that will help to shape a more nuanced view of residential child care policy, research and practice.
James K. Whittaker Ph.D, Charles O. Cressey Endowed Professor of Social Work Emeritus, The University of Washington
Highly vulnerable children often fail in foster homes, retraumatized by multiple placements. Some require intensive relational care, turning trauma into resilience. Henderson's well-researched book deflates fake science that is eliminating the most intensive alternatives for these young people.
Larry K. Brendtro
PhD, author, Reclaiming Youth at Risk: Futures of Promise
This scholarly exploration of research on group care for vulnerable children crosses years and continents. The forensic approach to the knowledge base will be welcomed by all who argue for a continuing place for good quality childrens homes within the range of placements for (older) children.
June Thoburn CBE, LiitD, MSW, Emeritus Professor of Social Work, University of East Anglia
Bruce Henderson has methodically collated and rigorously interrogated the so-called and actual evidence base for the enduring dominant discourse that residential childcare categorically causes harm and therefore should remain an option of last resort. He similarly interrogates the evidence for a quieter but no less stubborn alternative discourse: that high-quality residential care can be the best option to support some children to flourish at some points in their lives. The books rigour, even-handedness and readability make it an extremely valuable resource for anyone who wants to move beyond ideology, assumption and distortion.
Laura Steckley, PhD Senior Lecturer, School of Social Work & Social Policy/CELCIS University of Strathclyde