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E-grāmata: SAGE Handbook of Social Work

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  • Formāts: 808 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Jun-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Sage Publications Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781446266045
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  • Formāts: 808 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 22-Jun-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Sage Publications Ltd
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781446266045
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This Handbook is the worlds first generic major reference work to provide an authoritative guide to the theory, method, and values of social work in one volume.





Drawn from an international field of excellence, the contributors each offer a critical analysis of their individual area of expertise. The result is this invaluable resource collection that not only reflects upon the condition of social work today but also looks to future developments.









Split into seven parts, the Handbook investigates:









- Policy dimensions



- Practice



- Perspectives



- Values and ethics



- The context of social work



- Research



- Future challenges









It is essential reading for all students, practitioners, researchers, and academics engaged in social work.

Recenzijas

This manual will be indispensable for anyone wishing to understand recent findings on common themes and different points of view in international social work. It presents a continued flow of practical orientation in easy to read contributions - Prof. Dr. Rainer Treptow, University of Tuebingen, Institute of Education This manual will be indispensable for anyone wishing to understand recent findings on common themes and different points of view in international social work. It presents a continued flow of practical orientation in easy to read contributions - Prof. Dr. Rainer Treptow, University of Tuebingen, Institute of Education -- K.E. Murphy * Choice *

List of Editors and Contributors
ix
Introduction 1(14)
Mel Gray
James Midgley
Stephen A. Webb
SECTION 1 WELFARE, SOCIAL POLICY, AND SOCIAL WORK
15(94)
1 Social Work, Social Policy, and Welfarism
19(14)
David G. Gil
2 Theorising the Neoliberal Welfare State for Social Work
33(18)
Mimi Abramovitz
3 New Modalities of Welfare Governance
51(16)
Robert P. Fairbanks II
4 Welfare Professionals and Street-Level Bureaucrats
67(14)
Sanford F. Schram
5 Gender and Welfare
81(13)
Mary Daly
6 Welfare and Social Development
94(15)
James Midgley
SECTION 2 SOCIAL WORK PERSPECTIVES
109(98)
7 Practice Perspectives
113(16)
Pamela Trevithick
8 Ecological Perspective
129(14)
Gordon Jack
9 Behavioural Perspectives
143(18)
Eileen Gambrill
10 Family Perspectives
161(15)
Jacqueline Corcoran
11 Strengths Perspective
176(15)
W. Patrick Sullivan
12 Critical Perspectives
191(16)
Karen Healy
SECTION 3 SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE
207(88)
13 Knowledge for Reflexive Practice
211(13)
Paula Doherty
Sue White
14 Risk Assessment and Decision Making
224(12)
Eileen Munro
15 Integrative Psychotherapy
236(12)
Marlene Cooper
Joan Lesser
16 Crisis Intervention
248(16)
Barry R. Cournoyer
17 Empowering and Transformative Practice
264(15)
Karen S. Haynes
18 Community Practice
279(16)
Keith Popple
SECTION 4 SOCIAL WORK VALUES AND ETHICS
295(92)
19 Codes of Ethics
299(17)
Frederic G. Reamer
20 Ethical Decision Making
316(12)
Donna McAuliffe
21 Anti-Oppressive Practice
328(13)
Lena Dominelli
22 Feminist Ethics of Care
341(14)
Brid Featherstone
Kate Morris
23 Diversity and Social Work Practice
355(17)
Purnima Sundar
John Sylvestre
Amandeep Bassi
24 Human Rights and Social Justice
372(15)
Richard Hugman
SECTION 5 SOCIAL WORK RESEARCH
387(112)
25 Mapping the Social Work Research Agenda
391(17)
Daniel Gredig
Ian Shaw
Peter Sommerfeld
26 Evidence-Based Practice and Social Work
408(16)
Bruce A. Thyer
27 Intervention Research
424(16)
Brian J. Taylor
28 Evaluation Research
440(14)
Donald Forrester
29 Qualitative Social Work Research
454(13)
Deborah K. Padgett
30 Participatory Action Research
467(15)
Mark Baldwin
31 Systematic Review
482(17)
Elaine Sharland
SECTION 6 SOCIAL WORK IN CONTEXT
499(128)
32 Child and Family Social Work
503(12)
Stan Houston
33 Mental Health
515(16)
Barbara Fawcett
34 Older People
531(16)
Nancy R. Hooyman
35 Disability
547(17)
Romel W. Mackelprang
36 Immigrants and Refugees
564(15)
Doreen Elliott
Uma A. Segal
37 Drug and Alcohol Interventions
579(18)
Holly Matto
38 Criminal and Juvenile Justice
597(16)
Nicola Carr
39 Family Support Services
613(14)
Steven Walker
SECTION 7 FUTURE CHALLENGES FOR SOCIAL WORK
627(128)
40 The Future(s) of Social Work
631(15)
Paul Michael Garrett
41 Social Work Education
646(14)
David Stoesz
Howard Karger
42 Interprofessional Practice
660(17)
Imogen Taylor
43 New Technologies for Practice
677(16)
Thomas Ley
44 Service-User Involvement
693(14)
Peter Beresford
45 International Social Work
707(16)
Narda Razack
46 Social Work in `Developing' Countries
723(17)
Kwaku Osei-Hwedie
Morena J. Rankopo
47 The Politics of Social Work
740(15)
Iain Ferguson
Index 755
James Midgley is the Harry and Riva Specht Professor of Public Social Services and Dean Emeritus at the University of California, Berkeley. Originally from South Africa, he studied at the University of Cape Town and the London School of Economics and held academic appointments at both universities before moving to the United States 1985 where he served as as Dean of the School of Social Work and Associate Vice Chancellor for Research at Louisiana State University. He accepted the appointment as Specht Professor and Dean of the School of Social Welfare Berkeley in 1997.

He has published widely on issues of social development, social policy, social work and international social welfare. His major books include Professional Imperialism: Social Work in the Third World. Heinemann, 1981; Social Security, Inequality and the Third World, Wiley, 1984; Comparative Social Policy and the Third World, Harvester, 1987 (with Stewart MacPherson); The Social Dimensions of Development: Social Policy and Planning in the Third World, Gower, 1989 (with Margaret Hardiman); Social Development: The Developmental Perspective in Social Welfare, Sage, 1995; Social Welfare in Global Context, Sage, 1997; Social Policy for Development, Sage, 2004 (with Anthony Hall) and Social Development: Theory and Practice, Sage, 2014.

In addition, he has edited or co-edited many books on international social welfare and social development. Among the most recent are Social Work and Social Development: Theories and Skills for Developmental Social Work, Oxford University Press, 2010 (with Amy Conley); Social Policy and Poverty in East Asia: The Role of Social Security, Routledge, 2010 (with K. L. Tang); Grassroots Social Security in Asia, Routledge, 2011 (with Mitsuhiko Hosaka); Colonialism and Welfare: Social Policy and the British Imperial Legacy. Edward Elgar, 2011 (with David Piachaud); Planning and Community Development: Case Studies. Madrid: Technical University of Madrid, GrupoGESPLAN-UPM, 2012 (with Adolfo Carzola); Social Protection, Economic Growth and Social Change: Goals, Issues and Trajectories in China, India, Brazil and Africa. Edward Elgar, 2013 (with David Piachaud); Social Protection in Southern Africa: New Opportunities for Social Development. Routledge, 2014 (with Leila Patel and Marian Ulricksen) and Social Policy and Social Change in East Asia. Lexington Books, 2014 (with James Lee and Yapeng Zhu).

He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Social Work and Social Welfare and holds Honorary Professorial appointments at the University of Johannesburg in South Africa, Nihon Fukushi University in Japan, Sun Yat-sen University in China and the Hong Kong Polytechnic University.

 

In 2008 Stephen Webb was appointed from the University of Sussex, UK to the University of Newcastle. He is Professor of Human Sciences and Director of the newly established Research Institute for Social Inclusion and Wellbeing (RISIW). Professor Webb is one of the worlds leading international researchers in the field of human services, Social Policy and is a pioneer of evidence-based practice research. His influential international research and publications since the late 1980s have significantly enriched the field of human services research by bringing innovative theoretical and methodological perspectives to the evaluation of social interventions and professional practice. His 2006 book Social Work in a Risk Society is widely acclaimed by international reviewers as demonstrating advanced scholarship and integrating sociological analysis to construct new conceptual and methodological frameworks in social work. His 2001 publication: Some considerations on the validity of evidence-based practice in social work, British Journal of Social Work, 31 (1), pp.57-79 is the worlds highest cited social work (field 1607) publication and ranked as the most influential journal article in the discipline over the past decade (Hodge et.al, 2011).