It is difficult to imagine how orphan asylums and children's homes -
often depicted as places where abuse, deprivation, and cruelty were
commonplace - once presented a viable solution to child neglect. Renée
N. Lafferty examines this response as it played out in Halifax,
demonstrating how these homes reacted both creatively and valiantly to
their environment, despite chronic underfunding and a narrow vision of
the possibilities available to disadvantaged children. The Guardianship
of Best Interests traces the creation and administration of children's
homes in Halifax from the mid-nineteenth century to their closure in the
mid-twentieth. Against the backdrop of a city torn apart by race and
religious politics, financial challenges, two world wars, and the
devastating explosion of 1917, Halifax institutions frequently
represented themselves as the cutting edge of professional child welfare
methods. Placing their histories at the core of this study, Lafferty
challenges the common assertion that such homes were readily abandoned
in favour of the foster care method promoted by the Children's Aid
Society. Through the unique perspective gained by considering
inter-denominational competition, along with the effects of racism and
the political posturing of the province's emerging welfare bureaucracy,
The Guardianship of Best Interests unearths the significant similarities
between past child welfare practices and our current approaches toward
neglect and dependency.