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Table of Contents
1. Introduction: A serious injustice to the individual: British child migration to Australia as policy failure
2. The risk involved is inappreciable and the gain exceptional: child migration to Australia and empire settlement policy, 1919-39
3. Flawed progress: criticisms of residential institutions for child migrants in Australia and policy responses, 1939-45
4. Providing for children deprived of a normal home life: the Curtis report and the post-war landscape of childrens out-of-home care
5. Australia as the coming greatest foster-father the world has ever known: the post-war resumption of child migration to Australia, 1945-47
6. From regulation to moral persuasion: child migration policy and the Home Office Childrens Department, 1948-54
7. If we were untrammelled by precedent: pursuing gradual reform in child migration, 1954-61
8. Avoiding fruitless controversy: UK child migration programmes and the anatomy of policy failure.
2. The risk involved is inappreciable and the gain exceptional: child migration to Australia and empire settlement policy, 1919-39
3. Flawed progress: criticisms of residential institutions for child migrants in Australia and policy responses, 1939-45
4. Providing for children deprived of a normal home life: the Curtis report and the post-war landscape of childrens out-of-home care
5. Australia as the coming greatest foster-father the world has ever known: the post-war resumption of child migration to Australia, 1945-47
6. From regulation to moral persuasion: child migration policy and the Home Office Childrens Department, 1948-54
7. If we were untrammelled by precedent: pursuing gradual reform in child migration, 1954-61
8. Avoiding fruitless controversy: UK child migration programmes and the anatomy of policy failure.