Choosing to Care examines four significant areas where San Diego’s programs were distinct from, and contributed to, the national childcare agenda: the importance of the transnational U.S.–Mexico border relationship in creating effective childcare programs; the development of vocational education to curtail juvenile delinquency; the promotion of nursery school education; and the advancement of an emergency daycare program during the Great Depression and World War II. Ciani shows how children from families in unstable situations, especially children from Native American, Asian, Mexican-descent, African American, and impoverished Anglo families, challenged a social reform system that defined care as both social control and behavioral regulation.
Choosing to Care incorporates a broader definition of childcare to include efforts by governmental and organizational bodies and persons to maintain and nurture the physical, mental, and social health and development of minors when parents and guardians cannot do so. It offers a more complex understanding of how multiple avenues and resources established social welfare in San Diego and other West Coast cities.
Product details
- File Size: 3287 KB
- Print Length: 335 pages
- Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1496214595
- Publisher: University of Nebraska Press (October 1, 2019)
- Publication Date: October 1, 2019
- Language: English
- ASIN: B07Q4GN53F
- Text-to-Speech:
Enabled
- Word Wise: Enabled
- Lending: Enabled