Browsing College of Arts, Social Sciences and Celtic Studies by Author "Buckley, Sarah-Anne"
Now showing items 1-9 of 9
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Child neglect, poverty and class: the NSPCC in Ireland,1889-1939 - a case study
Buckley, Sarah-Anne (2008) -
Childhood since 1740
Buckley, Sarah-Anne; O'Riordan, Susannah (Cambridge University Press, 2017-04)[No abstract available] -
Family and power: Incest and Ireland, 1880-1950
Buckley, Sarah-Anne (Irish Academic Press, 2011-06-17)[No abstract available] -
‘Found in a “dying” condition’: nurse-children in Ireland, 1872–1952
Buckley, Sarah-Anne (Institute of Historical Research, 2012-09)[No abstract available] -
‘Growing Up Poor’: child welfare, motherhood and the State during the First World War
Buckley, Sarah-Anne (Taylor & Francis, 2016-11-23)In the history of child welfare in Ireland and other western countries, the period during the First World War coincided with a time of international attention on poor and working-class families and children. As this occurred ... -
Guest Editors’ Introduction
Buckley, Sarah-Anne; Hay, Marnie; Nic Congáil, Ríona (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2016)[No abstract available] -
Institutionalised for poverty: women's rights and child welfare in the Ireland, 1922-1996
Buckley, Sarah-Anne (Jacobin, 2016-05-27)While referring to all citizens of the Republic, the oft-cited reference to the 1916 Proclamation and cherishing all the children of the nation equally holds much relevance when discussing the institutionalisation of ... -
Interrogating institutionalisation and child welfare: the Irish case, 1939–1991*
Buckley, Sarah-Anne; McGregor, Caroline (Taylor & Francis, 2018-02-20)The topic of institutionalisation and child welfare in Ireland has garnered increasing national and international public and scholarly attention over the past twenty years. This is not an Irish phenomenon. Governments ... -
Parenting, poverty and the NSPCC in Ireland, 1889–1939
Buckley, Sarah-Anne (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017)This chapter addresses a number of key questions surrounding parenting, poverty and the state in Ireland from 1889 to 1939.1 Concentrating on the period from the opening of the first Irish branch of the National Society ...