Translating theory into practice? The implications for practitioners and users and carers
In: Practice: social work in action, Band 18, Heft 1, S. 17-30
ISSN: 1742-4909
6 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Practice: social work in action, Band 18, Heft 1, S. 17-30
ISSN: 1742-4909
In: Social policy and administration, Band 33, Heft 3, S. 245-261
ISSN: 1467-9515
This paper sets out the environment of inequality in which social work and the poor have recently operated. It explores pragmatic and idealist arguments concerning whether or not the poor need social work. Finally, policy solutions developed in consultation with social service users and carers are suggested in relation to poverty and social exclusion. Social exclusion can be linked to relative poverty as exclusion from economic and social norms. However, there is a wider brief in our own government's publications and those of Europe, of examining how people are excluded from actions and policies of agencies who are there to support them. This paper will retain the concepts of poverty as lack of material income, and inequality as the gap between the rich and the poor, while being aware of the policy implications for social service users and carers of the more comprehensive process of being shut out partially or fully from social, economic, political and cultural systems. The debates around social work, social exclusion and inequality that follow establish: that some of the poor do need social work; that the poverty of social service users is related to policies that have restructured welfare in Britain; that the reason for individuals approaching or being referred to social services are complex but are likely to include financial deprivation as a key contributory factor; that if the poor do need social work, advocacy is essential rather than social work being seen as concerned only with social control—taking children into care, mentally ill people into hospitals, and advising the DSS on the suitability of claimants for benefits. Finally, the discussion turns to new policy agendas on social exclusion instigated by the Labour government. What positive difference can such policies make for social service users, their carers and social workers?.
In: Social policy & administration: an international journal of policy and research, Band 33, Heft 3, S. 245-261
ISSN: 0037-7643, 0144-5596
In: The British journal of social work, Band 48, Heft 5, S. 1493-1494
ISSN: 1468-263X
In: Child & family social work, Band 14, Heft 3, S. 352-361
ISSN: 1365-2206
ABSTRACTSince the mid‐1990s, China has become one of the major countries from which children are adopted overseas. This paper examines ways in which globalization has contributed to the development of international adoption from China and explores cultural and historical attitudes to population growth, child abandonment and adoption. How China's social, economic and welfare policies have affected adoption policies and practices are discussed, with reference to ethnographic fieldwork undertaken by the authors between 2001 and 2007. Interviews and group discussions were conducted with UK, Chinese and American adoptive parents, directors of social welfare institutes, Chinese welfare officials and staff of non‐government organizations working in the area of adoption and fostering in China. While globalization has affected, and continues to affect inter‐country adoption, its influence in China is analysed using Masson's value positions on international adoption – abolitionists, promoters and pragmatists. China's pragmatic approach to international adoption is considered in relation to policies that reflect the best interests of children in China and overseas.