A Social Justice Approach to Survey Design and Analysis is written for students, teachers, researchers and anyone who is interested in conducting research. It draws heavily on current discussions regarding social justice, equity, health disparities and social determinants of health to provide a framework for researchers to use both to engage in social justice research as well as to evolve as social justice practitioners. This research book includes a framework of the continuum of social justice research, a presentation on how to provide an active voice for the community in the design and exact
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English US schools of social work were surveyed to determine the extent of their collaborations with social work programs outside the US. One school of social work's experiences with collaborations with a school in India and a school in Ghana are described. Recommendations for future collaborations are given. French Nous avons passé en revue les é coles de travail social é tats-uniennes afin de dé terminer la porté e de leur collaboration avec des programmes de travail social hors frontiè res. Nous dé crivons par la suite les expé riences de collaboration de une é cole de travail social avec une é cole en Inde et une au Ghana. Des recommandations pour des projets de collaborations futurs sont donné es. Spanish Investigamos escuelas de trabajo social en los Estados Unidos para determinar los alcances de sus colaboraciones con programas de trabajo social fuera de los Estados Unidos. Despué s, se describen las experiencias de una escuela de trabajo social con colaboraciones con una escuela en India y otra en Ghana. Ademá s se ofrecen recomendaciones para futuras colaboraciones.
In: Social work in health care: the journal of health care social work ; a quarterly journal adopted by the Society for Social Work Leadership in Health Care, Band 22, Heft 2, S. 1-17
AbstractAt least since the last decade of the 20th century, there has been strong scholarly interest in a perceived global wave of religious nationalism. Critical to that movement was the most important recent development in Indian politics, the rise of the Hindu right. Commentators lamented a fundamental change in the Indian body politic, the demise of India's celebrated secularism. However, others predicted that the Hindu nationalists would be forced to move to the center to gain votes, jettisoning much of their peculiar ideology in the process. The 2004 national parliamentary election was a crucial test of these contending interpretations. Would the Bharatiya Janata Party rely on its established arsenal of communally controversial issues? Would it emphasize themes designed to appeal to a broader audience? Analyzing reports published in national newspapers and news magazines, I will reach the surprising conclusion that the answer to both of these questions is yes.