Mark Smith
Mark Smith, MA (Hons) CQSW, M.Ed, PhD, Cert Child Protection Studies, Cert Social Services Leadership, FHEA, (since 2017) is Professor of Social Work at the University of Dundee, in Perth, Scotland. Before his academic career, Smith was a practitioner and manager in residential child care settings for 20 years. He developed and taught the Masters in Residential Child Care at Strathclyde University/Glasgow School of Social Work and, in 2005, he moved to the University of Edinburgh as lecturer. Subsequently, he became a senior lecturer in social work and served as head of social work there from 2013 - 2017. He has a broad range of research and writing interests, with some publications likely to interest MAPs, AAMs and their allies due to their relevance to debates on historical abuse in residential child care. These include critical articles and an edited volume on moral panics and UK child protection policy, as well as criticism of the myth of inevitable trauma from sexual contact involving an age gap, and recognizing the risk of iatrogenic/secondary harm through intervention from services.
In our page on Dr. Richard Yuill, we mentioned Smith and his co-authors Vivien E. Cree and Gary Clapton at the university of Edinburgh, as they were attacked in print by the professional Anti Dr. David Pilgrim. The authors had applied moral panic theory to analyze UK child protection discourses in articles such as Moral panics and social work: Towards a sceptical view of UK child protection (2012)[1], and edited the volume Revisiting Moral Panics (2015)[2] which Pilgrim took issue with. In the authors' words, Pilgrm decided "to use our book, Revisiting moral panics (Cree et al, 2015), to construct a straw man, which needs to be knocked down to preserve his own particular view of child sexual abuse."[3] Pilgrim responded, making "a brief concession [...] to a couple of points".[4]
With the Oxford Prof. Ros Burnett, Smith published "The origins of the Jimmy Savile scandal" (2018).[5] The article uses "interview material from former pupils and staff members from Duncroft School, from whence initial allegations against Savile emanate," and presents "a very different picture [...] to that presented in media accounts," a "questioning account of the origins of the scandal" which "may be claimed or used to cast doubt on accounts of abuse".
Earlier in 2008, Smith published the article 'Historical abuse in residential child care: an alternative view',[6]
References
- ↑ Moral panics and social work: Towards a sceptical view of UK child protection
- ↑ Revisiting Moral Panics
- ↑ Cree et al p223
- ↑ Cree et al p351
- ↑ Smith, M. and Burnett, R. (2018), "The origins of the Jimmy Savile scandal", International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, Vol. 38 No. 1/2, pp. 26-40. <https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSSP-03-2017-0029>.
- ↑ Historical abuse in residential child care: an alternative view, in Practice – Social Work in Action, Vol. 20 No. 1 (March 2008).
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