Social and Community Development Practice makes a persuasive case for employing a social development approach to community development practice at local and village levels. Towards this end, the book offers a conceptual clarity of social and community development (SCD) by adding new dimensions. It also shows the significance of social policy education for social and community development workers and the need for expanding community development practice from local levels to international levels. The author argues that the social work profession itself needs to quickly reorganize and strengthen
Zugriffsoptionen:
Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
To celebrate the golden jubilee of the International Consortium for Social Development (ICSD), this article looks at the origin, formation, and purpose of the ICSD, key leaders who led the consortium, its main activities and achievements, and prospects in the years to come. Drawing mainly on the secondary literature and the author's reflections, the analysis affirms and appreciates that the ICSD was formed on sound grounds and the vision of the leaders who pioneered the ICSD was well thought of as the ideas of social development are increasingly relevant in the contemporary and emerging contexts. Acknowledging the leaders and members who have sustained the consortium for 50 years, it commends its three critical activities: biennial internal conferences; Social Development Issues, a flagship journal of the ICSD; and conceptualizing and theorizing social development, which has contributed to creating and spreading the knowledge of social development worldwide. It also has gradually expanded its activities through its branches. Although there are challenges to articulating its contribution to the theory and practice of social development, ICSD's role in facilitating it, directly or indirectly, at least to some extent, cannot be denied. The article invites us to pose and ponder, whether the ICSD should have done more and or differently. It argues that such individual and collective reflections help us to envision, plan, and act together for the ICSD, fostering promising futures.
This article and editorial aims to point out 193 governments' unrealised pledge to eradicate extreme poverty and end hunger by 2030. The latest progress report shows that overall progress against the sustainable development goals 1 and 2 is not on track. It calls for renewed commitment by governments to allocate adequate resources and take practical steps to end poverty and hunger by engaging people at local levels at a global scale. It also introduces the special issue to critically analyse connections and disconnections among poverty, policy and the poor with a hope to engender further thought, research and action to end poverty and hunger.