The Contributors, 2013
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ISBN 978-0-7083-2562-9
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About the Contributors
Trudy Aspinwall has worked as an advocate for childrens rights in Wales since qualifying as a social worker in 1992. She works directly with children and young people and as a policy, research and participation worker in a variety of roles. She worked with Save the Children to initiate and then support the UNCRC Monitoring Group to influence key childrens rights developments in Wales, including the development of the Rights of Children and Young Persons (Wales) Measure 2011. Her policy and consultation work has involved her in working with young Gypsies and Travellers to influence Welsh Government strategy and develop materials and awareness raising on the UNCRC with and for Gypsy and Traveller children and young people during the early stages of the Travelling Ahead project.
Jennie Bibbings has worked in social policy since 2002, joining Shelter Cymru in March 2011. Her background is in consumer policy with a particular interest in public services, rights, redress and regulation. In 2010 and 2011 she conducted in-depth analyses of progress towards implementation of the recommendations of the Pennington Inquiry, which investigated the circumstances leading to the major E. coli O157 outbreak, which hit south Wales schools in 2005. Jennies role is to manage Shelter Cymrus research and policy work.
Ian Butler is Professor of Social Work at the University of Bath. He is a former special adviser to the First Minister of Wales. Following a career in social work practice, he has held academic posts at the universities of Cardiff and Keele, and is a member of the Academy of Social Sciences. He has published widely on social work with children and families and on welfare policy for children.
Luke Clements is a Professor at Cardiff Law School and a consultant solicitor. He has conducted and advised on many cases before the Commission and Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg involving both Roma and children, including the first Roma case to reach that court (Buckley v UK [1996]).
Rhian Croke is the UNCRC Monitoring Officer for Save the Children Wales and is a committed advocate for childrens rights. She coordinates the work of the Wales UNCRC Monitoring Group, a national alliance of agencies tasked with monitoring and promoting the implementation of the UNCRC in Wales. She is co-editor of Righting the Wrongs: The Reality of Childrens Rights in Wales (Cardiff: Save the Children, 2006), and Stop, Look, Listen: The Road to Realising Childrens Rights in Wales (Cardiff: Save the Children, 2007). She has previously worked as assistant director for Save the Children Wales and at the University of Cape Town Childrens Institute as a senior researcher in the HIV/AIDs Programme.
Anne Crowley is a policy and research consultant and obtained her PhD in 2011 from Cardiff University. Anne has undertaken research with children and young people on a range of issues including youth crime, public care, participation, advocacy services and child poverty. She is currently a member of the National Independent Advocacy Board set up by the Welsh Government to provide independent advice on the strategic development of advocacy provision for children and young people, and of the Wales Committee of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission. In 2007 Anne co-edited (with Rhian Croke) the alternative report on progress in implementing the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child in Wales, Stop, Look, Listen: The Road to Realising Childrens Rights in Wales (Cardiff: Save the Children, 2007).
Mark Drakeford has been the Labour Assembly Member for Cardiff West since 2011. He is Professor of Social Policy and Social Work at Cardiff University and has researched and written widely, particularly on social policy and devolution, poverty and social exclusion, and children and young people. He was, during Rhodri Morgans tenure as First Minister for Wales, Morgans special adviser and helped to craft many of the iconic policies of Labour in the Assembly.
Funky Dragon is the Children and Young Peoples Assembly for Wales. It is a peer-led organisation supported by Welsh Government funding and other funding. Funky Dragon gives 025-year-olds the opportunity to get their voices heard on issues affecting them.
Kevin Fitzpatrick has thirty-eight years direct experience of disability and the issues affecting disabled people. He is director of Inclusion21 Ltd, offering training and consultancy promoting equality and diversity. He taught philosophy at Swansea University and is an associate of the Welsh Institute for Health and Social Care at the University of Glamorgan. He is a non-executive director of the Welsh Ambulance Services NHS Trust, a board member of Consumer Focus Wales and chair of the board of trustees of St Davids Children Society adoption agency, and of Arts Care/ Gofal Celf. He was the first Disability Rights Commissioner for Wales, carrying out this role from 2000 to 2007. He was awarded the OBE for services to disabled people in Wales in 2011.
Simon Hoffman is a lecturer and researcher at Swansea University where he teaches human rights. His primary research interest is childrens rights and socio-economic rights, in particular how to give effect to internationally recognised rights and entitlements in national legal systems and domestic social and fiscal policy. Simon is currently focusing on implementation of childrens rights within devolved administrations, and the delivery of rights through duty-creating legal mechanisms linked to programmatic action. With Jane Williams, he is co-director of the Wales Observatory on Human Rights of Children and Young People.