توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Adult Social Care
نام کتاب : Adult Social Care
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : مراقبت اجتماعی بزرگسالان
سری :
نویسندگان : Iain Ferguson (editor), Michael Lavalette (editor)
ناشر : Policy Press
سال نشر : 2013
تعداد صفحات : 562
ISBN (شابک) : 9781447317357
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
CRITICAL AND RADICAL DEBATES IN SOCIAL WORK\nContents\nSeries editors’ introduction\nPoverty and inequality\n Notes on contributors\n Part One\n Lead essay\n “We don’t want to be ashamed tomorrow”: Poverty, inequality and the challenge to social workers\n Austere times\n The British state and ‘the problem of the poor’\n Poverty and capitalism\n Speak truth to power\n Listening to the movements\n Part Two\n Responses\n Which side are we on?\n The regulatory and liberatory functions of the US welfare state\n The neoliberal strategy\n The war on the welfare state is a war on women\n Loss of a strong advocate\n Conclusion\n Neoliberalism and welfare: the Canadian experience\n The Canadian context\n Social work and the Greek crisis\n Now time for neoliberalism: resisting Plan B from below\n Part Three\n Concluding remarks\n What are you going to do about it?\n References\nPersonalisation\n Notes on contributors\n Part One\n Lead essay\n Personalisation: from solution to problem?\n Introduction\n Patch/community social work\n The presentation of personalisation\n The evidence base\n The emerging evidence\n Selling individual/personal budgets\n Disabled people’s direct payments\n The new interest in personal budgets\n Making sense of personalisation\n Barriers in the way of personalisation\n Part Two\n Responses\n Personalisation, participation and policy construction: a critique of influences and understandings\n Up close and personal in Glasgow: the harmful carer, service user and workforce consequences of personalisation\n Introduction\n Personalisation implementation in Glasgow\n Trade union responses\n Postscript (28 August 2012)\n Personalisation – plus ça change?\n The need for true person-centred support\n All in the name of personalisation\n Personalisation – is there an alternative?\n Turning rebellion into money\n What is the alternative?\n Personal budgets: the two-legged stool that doesn’t stand up\n Has it changed the way resources are allocated?\n Has bureaucracy reduced?\n Government perception\n Conclusions\n Part Three\n Concluding remarks\n Once more on personalisation\n References\nAdult Social Care\n Notes on contributors\n Part One\n Lead essay\n The crisis in adult social care\n Introduction\n Capitalism and adult social care\n The marketisation of social care\n From Big Society to austerity\n Social work and the Big Society\n Personalisation, empowering communities and social action\n Conclusions: whither adult social work and social care?\n Part Two\n Responses\n The Big Society debate and the social care crisis\n How the market fails social care\n Principles\n Evidence\n Finances\n Regulation\n The crisis in social care: deepening the analysis\n Roots of the care crisis\n Extending alternative strategies\n Challenging the market and the state\n Personalisation: the experience in Glasgow\n Supporting informal carers\n Part Three\n Concluding remarks\n Some concluding remarks\n References\nMental health\n Notes on contributors\n Part One\n Lead essay\n Social work and mental health\n Introduction: No health without mental health\n Disentangling the role of social work\n Some tentative conclusions – giving us and our service users ‘room to breathe’\n Part Two\n Responses\n Letting madness breathe? Critical challenges facing mental health social work today\n Introduction\n New understandings of madness and distress\n Ongoing welfare support\n Supporting and developing alternatives\n Relational care and alliances\n Conclusion\n Agents of change? Social work for well-being and mental health\n Policy and practice context\n Developing a social action approach in mental health\n Thinking positive: assets, resilience and well-being\n Connecting psychological stress and colonialism\n Introduction\n Colonising language\n Colonising people and organisations\n Colonising through diagnoses and treatments\n Conclusion\n ‘Diagnosis human’: markets, targets and medicalisation in community mental health services\n The problem with recovery\n Introduction\n The recovery model\n The problem with recovery\n A student social worker’s perspective\n Introduction: ‘them’ and ‘us’\n Social work and mental health\n Observations from the front line\n Part Three\n Concluding remarks\n Some concluding thoughts\n References\nEthics\n Notes on contributors\n Part One\n Lead essay\n Reclaiming social work ethics: challenging the new public management1\n Introduction\n Ethics and radical social work\n What is ethics?\n ‘The ethics boom’\n Ethics and the new public management\n Reclaiming and reframing ethics in social work\n Concluding comments\n Part Two\n Responses\n A roadmap for social work ethics: reflections and a proposal\n The essence of contemporary social work ethics\n Contextualising the ‘ethics boom’\n Reframing social work ethics through a political ethic of care and social justice lens\n ‘Managerialism’: challenging the new orthodoxy\n Ethical practice in an unethical environment\n Introduction\n Implications for social work values\n Ethical discourse\n The master narrative\n Conclusion\n Social work ethics and social justice: the growing gap\n Introduction\n ‘Ethics of social justice’ and ‘ethics of care’\n NPM and the dialectic of care and control\n Ethics of social work in Japanese context: a deviance of theoretical and political?\n Concluding comments\n Working in the spaces between care and control\n Introduction\n The inadequacies of a principle-based codes approach to ethics\n Ethical trespass\n Bringing in the voices of the marginalised\n The bifurcation of ethics and politics\n New Public Management and gender: exploitation and the disavowal of emotion\n Conclusion\n A Marxist perspective\n Part Three\n Concluding remarks\n Reflections on the responses to ‘Reclaiming social work ethics’\n International perspectives\n Challenges to ‘Reclaiming social work ethics’\n What next for social work ethics?\n References\nChildren and families\n Notes on contributors\n Part One\n Lead essay\n Radical and critical perspectives on social work with children and families: England and the Republic of Ireland\n England\n The Republic of Ireland\n Conclusion: a child protection economy and the new radical social work\n Part Two\n Responses\n The crisis in social work with children and families: response to Paul Michael Garrett\n Introduction\n The poverty problem\n The policy problem\n The practice problem\n Conclusion\n Rights and wrongs: young citizens in a young country\n Social justice social work struggles in Canada: poverty, neoliberalism and symbolic resistance\n ‘What is to be done?’\n Social work and the sociological imagination\n Lost in Arcadia?\n Problematising social work: some reactions\n Part Three\n Concluding remarks\n Some concluding thoughts\n ‘Battlefield’ notes\n A ‘progressive universalism’ beyond Westminster?\n The state as ‘debt collector’: the Republic of Ireland\n Our ‘part in the game’\n Is another social work is possible?\n References