How do you reference the Victoria Climbie report?

In the reference list: Laming, W. H. (2003). The Victoria Climbie inquiry: Report of an inquiry by Lord Laming (Cm. 5730). London: The Stationery Office.

How do I reference the Laming Report 2009?

Laming L. The Protection of Children in England: A Progress Report. London: The Stationery Office; 2009.

What were the findings of the Laming report?

Lord Laming’s report concluded that Victoria’s death had been entirely preventable—12 key occasions were identified where services could have successfully intervened to prevent Victoria coming to further harm. In each case the opportunity was missed.

How many recommendations did Lord Laming make?

The report, which was warmly welcomed by children’s services and social work leaders, made 58 recommendations. These are all summarised below.

What is Lord Lamings name?

William Herbert Laming, Baron Laming, CBE, PC (born 19 July 1936) is a British social worker and member of the House of Lords.

How do you reference an inquiry report?

To cite a report in a reference entry, include the author, year, title of the report, the report number (if there is one), and the publisher. In-text citations would follow the typical format of including the author (or authoring organization) and year of publication.

What did the Laming report do?

Lord Laming’s final report, published in January 2003, concluded that the child protection system failed as a result of a lamentable lack of “basic good practice” by frontline staff and, most significantly, senior managers failing to take responsibility for the failings of their organisations.

What were the key findings of the Laming inquiry into Victoria Climbie case?

What was the outcome of Victoria Climbie?

Victoria was an 8 year old girl that died in February 2000. Kouao and Manning, her aunt and partner, were found guilty of murder and sentenced to life imprisonment in January 2001.

How do you Harvard reference the Victoria Climbie inquiry?

Author (Year) Title of inquiry. (Parliamentary or Command Paper number). Available at: URL (Accessed: date). Laming, Lord (2003) The Victoria Climbé inquiry.

Who published every child matters?

The project is funded by the Department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF). What is Every Child Matters? In 2003, the Government published a green paper called Every Child Matters.

What was the report of the Victoria Climbie inquiry?

This document contains the following information: The Victoria Climbie Inquiry: report of an inquiry by Lord Laming. This Command Paper was laid before Parliament by a Government Minister by Command of Her Majesty. Command Papers are considered by the Government to be of interest to Parliament but are not required to be presented by legislation.

What did Lord Laming say about Victoria Climbie?

In his report on the torture, starvation, and eventual murder of Victoria Climbié, Lord Laming noted that any case of deliberate harm to a child is a serious and potentially fatal condition that deserves the same quality of diagnosis and treatment as a brain tumour or heart disease.1His report includes a long list of recommendations.

Who was the pathologist who examined Victoria climbia?

She was a very friendly and happy child.” Victoria’s injuries 1.8 At the end, Victoria’s lungs, heart and kidneys all failed. Dr Nathaniel Carey, a Home Office pathologist with many years’ experience, carried out the post-mortem examination.

What did Patrick Cameron say about Victoria Climbie?

1 Introduction “Victoria had the most beautiful smile that lit up the room.” Patrick Cameron 1.1 This Report begins and ends with Victoria Climbié. It is right that it should do so.