1 'A Serious Injustice to the Individual': British Child Migration to Australia as Policy Failure
2 'The Risk Involved is Inappreciable... and the Gain Exceptional': Child Migration to Australia and Empire Settlement Policy, 1913-1939
3 Flawed Progress: Criticisms of Residential Institutions for Child Migrants in Australia and Policy Responses, 1939-1945
4 'Providing for Children... Deprived of a Normal Home Life': The Curtis Report and the Post-war Policy Landscape of Children's Out-of-Home Care
5 'Australia as the Coming Greatest Foster-Father of Children the World Has Ever Known': The Post-war Resumption of Child Migration to Australia, 1945-1947
6 From Regulation to Moral Persuasion: Child Migration Policy and the Home Office Children's Department, 1948-1954
7 'If We Were Untrammelled by Precedent...': Pursuing Gradual Reform in Child Migration, 1954-1961
8 'Avoiding Fruitless Controversy': UK Child Migration and the Anatomy of Policy Failure