This is a collection of essays that address the international changes in welfare policy. The book discusses the new patterns of governing associated with the notions of welfare, care, and education that emerge during the late Twentieth and early Twenty-first-centuries. The issues examined are, among others, the role of international donors and their emphasis on efficiency and lower social subsidies, international migration and its impact on welfare policy inclusions (and exclusions), and national policy change. While representing many different locations and traditions, contributors work within a variety of critical theoretical perspectives that critique our cultural ways of reasoning about the care and education of the child, the role and practice of the state, and the social and cultural construction of citizenship and nationhood.PART I: GLOBAL AND LOCAL PATTERNS OF GOVERNING THE CHILD, THE FAMILY, THEIR CARE AND EDUCATION: AN INTRODUCTION; M.Bloch, T.Popkewitz, K.Holmlund & I.Moqvist PART II: THE UNIVERSAL CHILD AND FAMILY IN A GLOBAL SOCIETY: THE NATIONAL CONTEXT WITHIN THE GLOBAL CIRCULATION OF POWER RELATIONS The Ethics of Learning; G.Dahlberg The Welfare State and the Changed Meaning of Childhood; G.Hallden Constructing a Parent; I.Moqvist Children's Rights and the Protection of Childhood Under Changing Conditions in Russia; E.Smirnova & V.Sobkin PART III: HISTORIES AND HISTORIOGRAPHIES OF THE CHILD, FAMILY, CARE AND SCHOOLING Remaking the Home and 'Belonging': Changing Patterns of Governing the Child in the Family; T.S.Popkewitz Hear Ye! Hear Ye! The State, (Dis)ability, Education, and the Child; B.Baker The Child and the Spectacle of Policy in the Age of the 'Dangerous Individual'; C.Bailey Early Childhood Education: the Duty of the Family or Institutions?; L.Chalmel PART IV: YOUNG CHILD, GENDER AND CHANGING GOVERNING PATTERNS The State and Wage Earning Mothers: Ideology or Reality?; K.Holmlund Child Welfare in the United States: The Construction ofl“7