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Featured researches published by Nicola Horsley.


Critical Social Policy | 2015

Brain science and early years policy: Hopeful ethos or ‘cruel optimism’?

Rosalind Edwards; Val Gillies; Nicola Horsley

Ideas that the quality of parental nurturing and attachment in the first years of a child’s life is formative, hard-wiring their brains for success or failure, are reflected in policy reports from across the political spectrum and in targeted services delivering early intervention. In this article we draw on our research into ‘Brain science and early intervention’, using reviews of key policy literature and interviews with influential advocates of early intervention and with early years practitioners, to critically assess the ramifications and implications of these claims. Rather than upholding the ‘hopeful ethos’ proffered by advocates of the progressive nature of brain science and early intervention, we show that brain claims are justifying gendered, raced and social inequalities, positioning poor mothers as architects of their children’s deprivation.


Social Policy and Society | 2016

Early intervention and evidence-based policy and practice: framing and taming

Rosalind Edwards; Val Gillies; Nicola Horsley

In this article, we highlight some critical matters in the way that an issue is framed as a problem in policymaking and the consequent means of taming that problem, in focussing on the use and implications of neuroscientific discourse of brain claims in early intervention policy and practice. We draw on three sets of analyses: of the contradictory set of motifs framing the state of ‘evidence’ of what works in intervention in the early years; of the (mis)use of neuroscientific discourse to frame deficient parenting as causing inequalities and support particular policy directions; and of the way that early years practitioners adopt brain claims to tame the problem of deficient parenting. We argue that using expedient brain claims as a framing and taming justification is entrenching gendered and classed understandings and inequalities.


The Sociological Review | 2016

Brave new brains: sociology, family and the politics of knowledge

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley

This article critically explores sociological arguments for greater biosocial synthesis, centring contemporary developments in public policy to demonstrate how such a reframing of humanity tends to reinforce existing political orders and socially patterned normativities. The case for further amalgamation of the social and life sciences is examined to suggest that production of somatic markers of truth from relational encounters largely relies upon an anaemic and politically contained version of the social as acquired in early childhood. More specifically, the gendered, classed and culturally specific practice of parenting children has come to occupy a new significance in accounts of social brains and environmentally reactive genomes. This is highlighted through a discussion of ‘early intervention’ as a heavily biologized policy rationale framing opportunities for biosocial collaboration. It is argued that late capitalist objectives of personal investment and optimization are driving this assimilation of the social and life sciences, pursuing an agenda that traces and rescores long-standing social divisions in the name of progress.


Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work | 2017

Challenging the politics of early intervention: who's 'saving' children and why

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley

A vital interrogation of the internationally accepted policy and practice consensus that intervention to shape parenting in the early years is the way to prevent disadvantage. Given the divisive assumptions and essentialist ideas behind early years intervention, in whose interests does it really serve? This book critically assesses assertions that the ‘wrong type of parenting’ has biological and cultural effects, stunting babies’ brain development and leading to a life of poverty and underachievement. It shows how early intervention policies underpinned by interpretations of brain science perpetuate gendered, classed and raced inequalities. The exploration of future directions will be welcomed by those looking for a positive, collectivist vision of the future that addresses the real underlying issues in the creation of disadvantage - See more at: https://policypress.co.uk/challenging-the-politics-of-early-intervention#sthash.0FnbgHuD.dpuf


Archive | 2018

Challenging the Politics of Early Intervention

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley


Archive | 2018

Case studies of interests at play

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley


Archive | 2018

Citizens of the future1

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley


Archive | 2018

Reclaiming the future: alternative visions

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley


Archive | 2018

In whose best interests

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley


Archive | 2018

Rescuing the infant brain

Val Gillies; Rosalind Edwards; Nicola Horsley

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