Social Work (eBook, PDF)
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Redaktion: Cree, Viviene E.; McCulloch, Trish
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Social Work (eBook, PDF)
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Redaktion: Cree, Viviene E.; McCulloch, Trish
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Building on the successful 1st edition, this reader brings together some of the most significant ideas that have informed social work practice over the last fifty years.
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Building on the successful 1st edition, this reader brings together some of the most significant ideas that have informed social work practice over the last fifty years.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. April 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000858822
- Artikelnr.: 67441968
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 282
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. April 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000858822
- Artikelnr.: 67441968
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Viviene E. Cree (PhD) is Professor Emerita of Social Work Studies at the University of Edinburgh. She is the author of Sociology for Social Workers and Probation Officers, editor of Becoming a Social Worker and co-author of Social Work: Voices from the Inside, all published by Routledge. Trish McCulloch (PhD) is Professor of Social Work and Senior Associate Dean in the School of Humanities, Social Sciences and Law at the University of Dundee. She has published widely on justice, social work and, more recently, on social work education and professional learning.
0.Introduction - Reading social work. Part One - The Profession of Social
Work. Commentary One. 1.Black History Month: a provocation and a timeline.
2.But is it social work?. 3.The politics of social work. 4.Changes in the
form of knowledge in social work: from the 'social' to the
'informational'?. 5.The quest for a universal social work: some issues and
implications. 6.The (r)evolution and decolonization of social work ethics:
The Global Social Work Statement of Ethical Principles. 7.Human rights
practice: possibilities and pitfalls for developing emancipatory social
work. 8.The impact of scandal and inquiries on social work and the personal
social services. 9.Social work in a risk society. 10.Am I my brother's
keeper?. 11.Research from the Underside. 12.What is Professional Social
Work?. 13.The Client Speaks. 14.Service users and practitioners reunited:
the key component for social work reform. Part Two - Knowledge and Values
for Social Work. Commentary Two. 15.The sociological imagination.
16.Reassessing attachment theory in child welfare. 17.A critique of the
adverse childhood experiences framework in epidemiology and public health:
Uses and misuses. 18.Resilience: Some conceptual considerations. 19.A
Critical Understanding of Social Work by Paolo Freire (1919). 20.There is
an alternative: homines curans and the limits of neoliberalism. 21.The
social model of disability. 22.The relevance of Nancy Fraser for
transformative social work education. 23.Feminism for the 99%.
24.Intersectionality's definitional dilemmas. 25.Learning to deliver LGBT+
aged care. 26.Towards practicing social work law. 27.What are values and
ethics?. 28.Green social work in theory and practice: a new environmental
paradigm for the profession. Part Three - Practice in Social Work.
Commentary Three. 29.On the nature of practice. 30.'Radical Social Work' by
Roy Bailey and Mike Brake: A Classic Text Revisited. 31.The critical role
of street level bureaucrats. 32.Assessment in the twenty-first century.
33.The significance of African-centered social work for social work
practice. 34.Bridging the Past and Present to the Future of Crisis
Intervention and Crisis Management. 35.The contemporary context of
relationship-based practice. 36.The ecological systems metaphor in
Australasia. 37.The strengths perspective in social work practice:
extensions and cautions. 38.Personalisation through participation: A new
script for public services. 39.Collaboration and partnership in context.
40.A review of Donald A. Schön's, The Reflective Practitioner: How
Professionals Think in Action. 41.Making things new: Distant Voices and
Unbound at Vox Liminis with Padraig O'Tuama.
Work. Commentary One. 1.Black History Month: a provocation and a timeline.
2.But is it social work?. 3.The politics of social work. 4.Changes in the
form of knowledge in social work: from the 'social' to the
'informational'?. 5.The quest for a universal social work: some issues and
implications. 6.The (r)evolution and decolonization of social work ethics:
The Global Social Work Statement of Ethical Principles. 7.Human rights
practice: possibilities and pitfalls for developing emancipatory social
work. 8.The impact of scandal and inquiries on social work and the personal
social services. 9.Social work in a risk society. 10.Am I my brother's
keeper?. 11.Research from the Underside. 12.What is Professional Social
Work?. 13.The Client Speaks. 14.Service users and practitioners reunited:
the key component for social work reform. Part Two - Knowledge and Values
for Social Work. Commentary Two. 15.The sociological imagination.
16.Reassessing attachment theory in child welfare. 17.A critique of the
adverse childhood experiences framework in epidemiology and public health:
Uses and misuses. 18.Resilience: Some conceptual considerations. 19.A
Critical Understanding of Social Work by Paolo Freire (1919). 20.There is
an alternative: homines curans and the limits of neoliberalism. 21.The
social model of disability. 22.The relevance of Nancy Fraser for
transformative social work education. 23.Feminism for the 99%.
24.Intersectionality's definitional dilemmas. 25.Learning to deliver LGBT+
aged care. 26.Towards practicing social work law. 27.What are values and
ethics?. 28.Green social work in theory and practice: a new environmental
paradigm for the profession. Part Three - Practice in Social Work.
Commentary Three. 29.On the nature of practice. 30.'Radical Social Work' by
Roy Bailey and Mike Brake: A Classic Text Revisited. 31.The critical role
of street level bureaucrats. 32.Assessment in the twenty-first century.
33.The significance of African-centered social work for social work
practice. 34.Bridging the Past and Present to the Future of Crisis
Intervention and Crisis Management. 35.The contemporary context of
relationship-based practice. 36.The ecological systems metaphor in
Australasia. 37.The strengths perspective in social work practice:
extensions and cautions. 38.Personalisation through participation: A new
script for public services. 39.Collaboration and partnership in context.
40.A review of Donald A. Schön's, The Reflective Practitioner: How
Professionals Think in Action. 41.Making things new: Distant Voices and
Unbound at Vox Liminis with Padraig O'Tuama.
0.Introduction - Reading social work. Part One - The Profession of Social
Work. Commentary One. 1.Black History Month: a provocation and a timeline.
2.But is it social work?. 3.The politics of social work. 4.Changes in the
form of knowledge in social work: from the 'social' to the
'informational'?. 5.The quest for a universal social work: some issues and
implications. 6.The (r)evolution and decolonization of social work ethics:
The Global Social Work Statement of Ethical Principles. 7.Human rights
practice: possibilities and pitfalls for developing emancipatory social
work. 8.The impact of scandal and inquiries on social work and the personal
social services. 9.Social work in a risk society. 10.Am I my brother's
keeper?. 11.Research from the Underside. 12.What is Professional Social
Work?. 13.The Client Speaks. 14.Service users and practitioners reunited:
the key component for social work reform. Part Two - Knowledge and Values
for Social Work. Commentary Two. 15.The sociological imagination.
16.Reassessing attachment theory in child welfare. 17.A critique of the
adverse childhood experiences framework in epidemiology and public health:
Uses and misuses. 18.Resilience: Some conceptual considerations. 19.A
Critical Understanding of Social Work by Paolo Freire (1919). 20.There is
an alternative: homines curans and the limits of neoliberalism. 21.The
social model of disability. 22.The relevance of Nancy Fraser for
transformative social work education. 23.Feminism for the 99%.
24.Intersectionality's definitional dilemmas. 25.Learning to deliver LGBT+
aged care. 26.Towards practicing social work law. 27.What are values and
ethics?. 28.Green social work in theory and practice: a new environmental
paradigm for the profession. Part Three - Practice in Social Work.
Commentary Three. 29.On the nature of practice. 30.'Radical Social Work' by
Roy Bailey and Mike Brake: A Classic Text Revisited. 31.The critical role
of street level bureaucrats. 32.Assessment in the twenty-first century.
33.The significance of African-centered social work for social work
practice. 34.Bridging the Past and Present to the Future of Crisis
Intervention and Crisis Management. 35.The contemporary context of
relationship-based practice. 36.The ecological systems metaphor in
Australasia. 37.The strengths perspective in social work practice:
extensions and cautions. 38.Personalisation through participation: A new
script for public services. 39.Collaboration and partnership in context.
40.A review of Donald A. Schön's, The Reflective Practitioner: How
Professionals Think in Action. 41.Making things new: Distant Voices and
Unbound at Vox Liminis with Padraig O'Tuama.
Work. Commentary One. 1.Black History Month: a provocation and a timeline.
2.But is it social work?. 3.The politics of social work. 4.Changes in the
form of knowledge in social work: from the 'social' to the
'informational'?. 5.The quest for a universal social work: some issues and
implications. 6.The (r)evolution and decolonization of social work ethics:
The Global Social Work Statement of Ethical Principles. 7.Human rights
practice: possibilities and pitfalls for developing emancipatory social
work. 8.The impact of scandal and inquiries on social work and the personal
social services. 9.Social work in a risk society. 10.Am I my brother's
keeper?. 11.Research from the Underside. 12.What is Professional Social
Work?. 13.The Client Speaks. 14.Service users and practitioners reunited:
the key component for social work reform. Part Two - Knowledge and Values
for Social Work. Commentary Two. 15.The sociological imagination.
16.Reassessing attachment theory in child welfare. 17.A critique of the
adverse childhood experiences framework in epidemiology and public health:
Uses and misuses. 18.Resilience: Some conceptual considerations. 19.A
Critical Understanding of Social Work by Paolo Freire (1919). 20.There is
an alternative: homines curans and the limits of neoliberalism. 21.The
social model of disability. 22.The relevance of Nancy Fraser for
transformative social work education. 23.Feminism for the 99%.
24.Intersectionality's definitional dilemmas. 25.Learning to deliver LGBT+
aged care. 26.Towards practicing social work law. 27.What are values and
ethics?. 28.Green social work in theory and practice: a new environmental
paradigm for the profession. Part Three - Practice in Social Work.
Commentary Three. 29.On the nature of practice. 30.'Radical Social Work' by
Roy Bailey and Mike Brake: A Classic Text Revisited. 31.The critical role
of street level bureaucrats. 32.Assessment in the twenty-first century.
33.The significance of African-centered social work for social work
practice. 34.Bridging the Past and Present to the Future of Crisis
Intervention and Crisis Management. 35.The contemporary context of
relationship-based practice. 36.The ecological systems metaphor in
Australasia. 37.The strengths perspective in social work practice:
extensions and cautions. 38.Personalisation through participation: A new
script for public services. 39.Collaboration and partnership in context.
40.A review of Donald A. Schön's, The Reflective Practitioner: How
Professionals Think in Action. 41.Making things new: Distant Voices and
Unbound at Vox Liminis with Padraig O'Tuama.