The Routledge Handbook of International Critical Social Work (eBook, ePUB)
New Perspectives and Agendas
Redaktion: A. Webb, Stephen
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New Perspectives and Agendas
Redaktion: A. Webb, Stephen
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The Routledge Handbook of International Critical Social Work is a companion volume to the Routledge Handbook of Critical Social Work. It brings together world leading scholars in the field to provide additional in-depth, and provocative consideration of alternative and progressive ways of thinking about social work.
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The Routledge Handbook of International Critical Social Work is a companion volume to the Routledge Handbook of Critical Social Work. It brings together world leading scholars in the field to provide additional in-depth, and provocative consideration of alternative and progressive ways of thinking about social work.
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: 726
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. November 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000645514
- Artikelnr.: 65995498
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 726
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. November 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000645514
- Artikelnr.: 65995498
Stephen A. Webb is Professor of Social Work and Assistant Vice Principal of Community and Public Engagement at Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences and previously worked as Research Professor at University of Newcastle, Australia and University of Sussex. Stephen is author of Social Work in a Risk Society (2006), and co-author/editor of The New Politics of Social Work (2013); Evidence-based Social Work: A Critical Stance (2009, Routledge); Ethics and Value Perspectives in Social Work (2010); Social Work Theories and Methods (2012, second edition, translated into Korean and Polish); The SAGE Handbook of Social Work (2012); the major international reference work International Social Work (2010, 4 Volumes); and Information and Communication Technology in the Welfare Services (2003). In 2019 he edited the Routledge Handbook of Critical Social Work (2019), a major international reference work. His research interests focus on theorising social work, biopolitics, community, place and the more-than-human.
0.Introduction - Analytics of Power and Politics for Social Work:
Introduction to the Handbook. 1.Elements for a Critical Theory of Social
Work. 2.'Passing on' Critical Social Work. 3.Horror Autotoxicus: Critical
Social Work as Autoimmunity. 4.A View of 'Social Work' through the
attualità of Italian Thought. 5.Reconceptualising Welfare and Social
Justice for Critical Social Work. 6.The New Left and Social Work. 7.How
Critical Social Work Theory Informs Radical Social Work Practice.
8.Neoliberal Social Work and Digital Technology. 9.The Hardening of
Neoliberalism on Social Work in a Pandemic Scenario. 10.Accelerated Time in
the Neoliberal University. 11.Critical Social Work with Children and
Families in the Neoliberal World. 12.The Biopolitics of Childhood.
13.Widening the Securitisation Net in Social Work. 14.Ideology, Critical
Social Work and the Tyranny of Resilience. 15.Dissenting Social Work.
16.Critical Social Work as Imperfect Work. 17.Disruptive Social Work from a
Global Perspective. 18.Social Work and the Movement to Abolish the Child
Welfare System. 19.Political Transition, Revolution and Radical Social
Work. 20.Radical Approaches to Anti-Poverty Strategies. 21.Critical Social
Work and Extreme Events. 22.Radical Approaches to Mental Health Social
Work. 23.Decolonisation, Whiteness and Anti-Racist Social Work. 24.The
Longue Durée of Black Lives Matter. 25.Social Work with Borders: Bordering
Technologies and Human Rights. 26.The Said and the Unsaid: Confronting
Racism in Social Work as 'Uncanny'. 27.Anti-Roma Racism, Social Work and
the White Civilizatory Mission. 28.Contesting Antigypsyism in Public
Policy. 29.Social Intervention and Migration: Critical Contributions.
30.Empowerment as Biopolitical: The Case of Roma People in the Czech
Republic. 31.Decolonising International Social Work. 32.International
Social Work: Theoretical Decolonising from a Tribal Gaze. 33.Speaking about
or for the Subaltern. 34.Native Americans and Tribal Life: Historical
Oppression and Transcendence. 35.Marxism and Social Work in Brazil.
36.Critical Social Work in Brazil: Historical, Theoretical and
Methodological Developments. 37.Towards a Critical Turn: Social Work in
Chile. 38.Doing Feminist Social Work: Working in, around and against
Settler Patriarchal Rule. 39.Sexuality, LQBTQ Issues and Critical Social
Work: Thinking with Queer and Post-Queer Theories. 40.Beyond the Gender
Binary as Liberatory Social Work Practice. 41.Transgender, Human Rights and
Social Work. 42.Agential Realism for Social Work. 43.Critical Social Work,
Material Culture and Object. 44.Plastic Participation: Love and Social Work
with Children. 45.Social Work and Environmental Justice: Expanding Critical
Social Work. 46.Green Social Work and Social Justice. 47.Social Work
Practice in the Post COVID-19 Era
Introduction to the Handbook. 1.Elements for a Critical Theory of Social
Work. 2.'Passing on' Critical Social Work. 3.Horror Autotoxicus: Critical
Social Work as Autoimmunity. 4.A View of 'Social Work' through the
attualità of Italian Thought. 5.Reconceptualising Welfare and Social
Justice for Critical Social Work. 6.The New Left and Social Work. 7.How
Critical Social Work Theory Informs Radical Social Work Practice.
8.Neoliberal Social Work and Digital Technology. 9.The Hardening of
Neoliberalism on Social Work in a Pandemic Scenario. 10.Accelerated Time in
the Neoliberal University. 11.Critical Social Work with Children and
Families in the Neoliberal World. 12.The Biopolitics of Childhood.
13.Widening the Securitisation Net in Social Work. 14.Ideology, Critical
Social Work and the Tyranny of Resilience. 15.Dissenting Social Work.
16.Critical Social Work as Imperfect Work. 17.Disruptive Social Work from a
Global Perspective. 18.Social Work and the Movement to Abolish the Child
Welfare System. 19.Political Transition, Revolution and Radical Social
Work. 20.Radical Approaches to Anti-Poverty Strategies. 21.Critical Social
Work and Extreme Events. 22.Radical Approaches to Mental Health Social
Work. 23.Decolonisation, Whiteness and Anti-Racist Social Work. 24.The
Longue Durée of Black Lives Matter. 25.Social Work with Borders: Bordering
Technologies and Human Rights. 26.The Said and the Unsaid: Confronting
Racism in Social Work as 'Uncanny'. 27.Anti-Roma Racism, Social Work and
the White Civilizatory Mission. 28.Contesting Antigypsyism in Public
Policy. 29.Social Intervention and Migration: Critical Contributions.
30.Empowerment as Biopolitical: The Case of Roma People in the Czech
Republic. 31.Decolonising International Social Work. 32.International
Social Work: Theoretical Decolonising from a Tribal Gaze. 33.Speaking about
or for the Subaltern. 34.Native Americans and Tribal Life: Historical
Oppression and Transcendence. 35.Marxism and Social Work in Brazil.
36.Critical Social Work in Brazil: Historical, Theoretical and
Methodological Developments. 37.Towards a Critical Turn: Social Work in
Chile. 38.Doing Feminist Social Work: Working in, around and against
Settler Patriarchal Rule. 39.Sexuality, LQBTQ Issues and Critical Social
Work: Thinking with Queer and Post-Queer Theories. 40.Beyond the Gender
Binary as Liberatory Social Work Practice. 41.Transgender, Human Rights and
Social Work. 42.Agential Realism for Social Work. 43.Critical Social Work,
Material Culture and Object. 44.Plastic Participation: Love and Social Work
with Children. 45.Social Work and Environmental Justice: Expanding Critical
Social Work. 46.Green Social Work and Social Justice. 47.Social Work
Practice in the Post COVID-19 Era
0.Introduction - Analytics of Power and Politics for Social Work:
Introduction to the Handbook. 1.Elements for a Critical Theory of Social
Work. 2.'Passing on' Critical Social Work. 3.Horror Autotoxicus: Critical
Social Work as Autoimmunity. 4.A View of 'Social Work' through the
attualità of Italian Thought. 5.Reconceptualising Welfare and Social
Justice for Critical Social Work. 6.The New Left and Social Work. 7.How
Critical Social Work Theory Informs Radical Social Work Practice.
8.Neoliberal Social Work and Digital Technology. 9.The Hardening of
Neoliberalism on Social Work in a Pandemic Scenario. 10.Accelerated Time in
the Neoliberal University. 11.Critical Social Work with Children and
Families in the Neoliberal World. 12.The Biopolitics of Childhood.
13.Widening the Securitisation Net in Social Work. 14.Ideology, Critical
Social Work and the Tyranny of Resilience. 15.Dissenting Social Work.
16.Critical Social Work as Imperfect Work. 17.Disruptive Social Work from a
Global Perspective. 18.Social Work and the Movement to Abolish the Child
Welfare System. 19.Political Transition, Revolution and Radical Social
Work. 20.Radical Approaches to Anti-Poverty Strategies. 21.Critical Social
Work and Extreme Events. 22.Radical Approaches to Mental Health Social
Work. 23.Decolonisation, Whiteness and Anti-Racist Social Work. 24.The
Longue Durée of Black Lives Matter. 25.Social Work with Borders: Bordering
Technologies and Human Rights. 26.The Said and the Unsaid: Confronting
Racism in Social Work as 'Uncanny'. 27.Anti-Roma Racism, Social Work and
the White Civilizatory Mission. 28.Contesting Antigypsyism in Public
Policy. 29.Social Intervention and Migration: Critical Contributions.
30.Empowerment as Biopolitical: The Case of Roma People in the Czech
Republic. 31.Decolonising International Social Work. 32.International
Social Work: Theoretical Decolonising from a Tribal Gaze. 33.Speaking about
or for the Subaltern. 34.Native Americans and Tribal Life: Historical
Oppression and Transcendence. 35.Marxism and Social Work in Brazil.
36.Critical Social Work in Brazil: Historical, Theoretical and
Methodological Developments. 37.Towards a Critical Turn: Social Work in
Chile. 38.Doing Feminist Social Work: Working in, around and against
Settler Patriarchal Rule. 39.Sexuality, LQBTQ Issues and Critical Social
Work: Thinking with Queer and Post-Queer Theories. 40.Beyond the Gender
Binary as Liberatory Social Work Practice. 41.Transgender, Human Rights and
Social Work. 42.Agential Realism for Social Work. 43.Critical Social Work,
Material Culture and Object. 44.Plastic Participation: Love and Social Work
with Children. 45.Social Work and Environmental Justice: Expanding Critical
Social Work. 46.Green Social Work and Social Justice. 47.Social Work
Practice in the Post COVID-19 Era
Introduction to the Handbook. 1.Elements for a Critical Theory of Social
Work. 2.'Passing on' Critical Social Work. 3.Horror Autotoxicus: Critical
Social Work as Autoimmunity. 4.A View of 'Social Work' through the
attualità of Italian Thought. 5.Reconceptualising Welfare and Social
Justice for Critical Social Work. 6.The New Left and Social Work. 7.How
Critical Social Work Theory Informs Radical Social Work Practice.
8.Neoliberal Social Work and Digital Technology. 9.The Hardening of
Neoliberalism on Social Work in a Pandemic Scenario. 10.Accelerated Time in
the Neoliberal University. 11.Critical Social Work with Children and
Families in the Neoliberal World. 12.The Biopolitics of Childhood.
13.Widening the Securitisation Net in Social Work. 14.Ideology, Critical
Social Work and the Tyranny of Resilience. 15.Dissenting Social Work.
16.Critical Social Work as Imperfect Work. 17.Disruptive Social Work from a
Global Perspective. 18.Social Work and the Movement to Abolish the Child
Welfare System. 19.Political Transition, Revolution and Radical Social
Work. 20.Radical Approaches to Anti-Poverty Strategies. 21.Critical Social
Work and Extreme Events. 22.Radical Approaches to Mental Health Social
Work. 23.Decolonisation, Whiteness and Anti-Racist Social Work. 24.The
Longue Durée of Black Lives Matter. 25.Social Work with Borders: Bordering
Technologies and Human Rights. 26.The Said and the Unsaid: Confronting
Racism in Social Work as 'Uncanny'. 27.Anti-Roma Racism, Social Work and
the White Civilizatory Mission. 28.Contesting Antigypsyism in Public
Policy. 29.Social Intervention and Migration: Critical Contributions.
30.Empowerment as Biopolitical: The Case of Roma People in the Czech
Republic. 31.Decolonising International Social Work. 32.International
Social Work: Theoretical Decolonising from a Tribal Gaze. 33.Speaking about
or for the Subaltern. 34.Native Americans and Tribal Life: Historical
Oppression and Transcendence. 35.Marxism and Social Work in Brazil.
36.Critical Social Work in Brazil: Historical, Theoretical and
Methodological Developments. 37.Towards a Critical Turn: Social Work in
Chile. 38.Doing Feminist Social Work: Working in, around and against
Settler Patriarchal Rule. 39.Sexuality, LQBTQ Issues and Critical Social
Work: Thinking with Queer and Post-Queer Theories. 40.Beyond the Gender
Binary as Liberatory Social Work Practice. 41.Transgender, Human Rights and
Social Work. 42.Agential Realism for Social Work. 43.Critical Social Work,
Material Culture and Object. 44.Plastic Participation: Love and Social Work
with Children. 45.Social Work and Environmental Justice: Expanding Critical
Social Work. 46.Green Social Work and Social Justice. 47.Social Work
Practice in the Post COVID-19 Era