Eats me alive!: social workers reflect on practice in neoliberal contexts
In: Social work education, Volume 40, Issue 2, p. 161-173
ISSN: 1470-1227
2430674 results
Sort by:
In: Social work education, Volume 40, Issue 2, p. 161-173
ISSN: 1470-1227
In: Evaluation and program planning: an international journal, Volume 2, Issue 3, p. 209-217
ISSN: 0149-7189
In: Asia Pacific Journal of Social Work and Development, Volume 24, Issue 1-2, p. 5-16
ISSN: 2165-0993
El artículo comienza con unas reflexiones en torno a la situación actual de la democracia y la participación, marcada por la crisis sistémica en la que vivimos. En la segunda parte se estudian las relaciones que se dan entre la profesión y formación universitaria en Trabajo Social y de estas con los programas de participación ciudadana ejecutados desde los Servicios Sociales. En la práctica profesional del Trabajo Social en entes locales se han ido reduciendo los proyectos de desarrollo comunitario y de fomento de la participación, aunque, de forma esperanzadora, en el nuevo título de Grado en Trabajo Social se vuelven a incluir estos temas entre las competencias que deben tener los futuros graduados. En un tercer bloque se trata de definir y diferenciar mejor los conceptos que se suelen utilizar cuando se tratan estos temas: democracia representativa/participativa y participación social/ciudadana, finalizando con la descripción y análisis de los diferentes niveles y formas de participación que se re-producen en las sociedades democráticas. The article begins with some reflections on the current situation of democracy and participation, marked by the systemic crisis in which we live. In the second part we deal with the relationships that exist between the profession and university training in social work, and between those and citizen participation programs run from social services. Professional social work practice in local services has reduced community development projects and participative projects, though, hopefully, the new Degree in Social Work reinstates these issues between the skills required future graduates. In a third section we try to define and differentiate the concepts that are often used when these topics: representative/participatory democracy and social/civic participation, ending with the description and analysis of the different levels and forms of participation that are re-produced in democratic societies. ; The article begins with some reflections on the current situation of democracy and participation, marked by the systemic crisis in which we live. In the second part we deal with the relationships that exist between the profession and university training in social work, and between those and citizen participation programs run from social services. Professional social work practice in local services has reduced community development projects and participative projects, though, hopefully, the new Degree in Social Work reinstates these issues between the skills required future graduates. In a third section we try to define and differentiate the concepts that are often used when these topics: representative/participatory democracy and social/civic participation, ending with the description and analysis of the different levels and forms of participation that are re-produced in democratic societies.
BASE
In: Qualitative social work: research and practice, Volume 17, Issue 4, p. 611-613
ISSN: 1741-3117
In: Administration in social work, Volume 3, Issue 3, p. 289-300
ISSN: 0364-3107
In: Practical Social Work Ser.
Cover -- Contents -- Preface to the fourth edition -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: setting the scene -- CHAPTER 1 Social work and disability: old and new directions -- Old directions -- New directions -- Explaining disability -- The social model and its implications for social work -- Further resources -- CHAPTER 2 Impairment, disability and research -- Introduction -- Relevance of medical control -- Medical knowledge and the social work task -- Identifying impairment -- Origin of impairment -- Classifying impairment -- Prevention of disability -- Impairment and disability -- The need to investigate disability -- Functional definitions of disability/disability research -- National surveys -- Definitions of disability in the design of questionnaires -- Further resources -- CHAPTER 3 Relationships and families -- Families and households -- Relationships -- Further resources -- CHAPTER 4 Independent living and personal assistance -- Introduction -- Centres for Independent Living -- Personal assistants and direct payments -- Assessment -- Other social services provision -- Residential accommodation for disabled people: a discredited provision -- Further resources -- CHAPTER 5 Independent living: the wider social policy and legal context -- Introduction -- Employment -- Equality and human rights -- Housing -- Disabled children and education -- The rights of disabled people: Ways forward? -- Further resources -- CHAPTER 6 Independent living: vulnerability and safeguarding -- Introduction -- Lessons from the past and meaning for today -- Institutional abuse -- Hate crime -- Abuse of disabled children -- Risk -- Further resources -- CHAPTER 7 Conclusion: future directions -- Theoretical and professional developments -- Organisational issues and structural developments -- Some strategies for social work -- Further resources -- References -- Index.
In: Critical & radical social work: an international journal, Volume 4, Issue 1, p. 39-57
ISSN: 2049-8675
The impacts of global capitalism and neoliberalism on higher education can reduce the social work curriculum to competency-based skills acquisition rather than critically reflective, transformative learning. This encourages the promotion of establishment social work approaches aimed at accepting the status quo, rather than critical forms of social work that critique the dominant social structures and power relations that cause broad social divisions. The marginalisation of critical approaches reshapes social work towards conservative, market-led demands, yet an explicitly critical social work curriculum is pivotal to the claim of social work as an emancipatory project. This article presents original research that discusses the impact of an Australia critical social work programme on students' development as agents of change. The findings suggest that developing a curriculum based on critical social science, and using critical pedagogical processes, assists students/graduates to work effectively for social justice and promotes their participation in collective social action.
In: Advances in social work, Volume 15, Issue 1, p. 63-79
ISSN: 2331-4125
This article describes the personal experiences and insights of a child welfare practitioner and professor derived from 20 years of involvement in IV-E agency/university partnerships. The author describes perspectives from her work in IV-E programs in multiple contexts (federal, state, and local). Included are descriptions of important historical events and changes in IV-E programs that have served to facilitate or impede successful child welfare practices and the education of IV-E students. Emphasis is given to the importance of: (a) communicating the complexity of work in child welfare particularly by IV-E students; (b) the challenge of sustaining effective IV-E partnership programs; (c) designing and implementing sound IV-E program evaluation procedures; and (c) understanding the political and policy-driven contexts framing current CW practices.
In: International social work, Volume 59, Issue 3, p. 343-358
ISSN: 1461-7234
Social work has a particular responsibility to develop culturally and religiously appropriate practice. Early childbearing occurs in many Muslim families and can be a sensitive issue because it is often shaped by local religious teachings. Early childbearing is associated with health and social vulnerabilities. Social work has an important role to partner with local religious leaders to support this vulnerable population. There are Islamic teachings that promote the care of pregnant mothers and babies. Many of these teachings are not well understood or applied when working with Muslim communities. Implications for social work research and practice are examined.
In: Practice: social work in action, Volume 17, Issue 4, p. 285-297
ISSN: 1742-4909
In: Review of radical political economics, Volume 44, Issue 4, p. 504-511
ISSN: 0486-6134
This up-to-date reference work explores theories, methods and practices of social work management education in higher education. It includes contributions from more than 30 scholars and researchers in the field of social work management education from more than 10 countries and 4 continents. The work is unique as it overcomes current barriers between the different sub-disciplines of social work didactics and management education, and takes into consideration the development of a discipline-specific Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL). The integrated and transdisciplinary approach to social work management education presented in this edited volume is of paramount importance to international scholars, teachers, practitioners, students and all other audiences interested in the field of education. The work provides an overview of the theoretical principles on how social work management can be taught and learned, and analyzes curricula, pedagogical approaches, actors, and socio-economic and institutional contexts of social work management at higher education institutions.