توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب :
دانش جهانی به طور فزاینده ای برای تمام جنبه های کار اجتماعی ضروری است. متخصصان امروزی به نگرانی هایی از جمله مرزهای نفوذپذیر، تحولات جنگ، کارگران آواره، بلایای طبیعی، فرزندخواندگی بین المللی و قاچاق انسان پاسخ می دهند. در همه جا، مددکاران اجتماعی با کاربران خدمات و همکاران از فرهنگ ها و کشورهای مختلف کار می کنند. مفاهیم مرتبط جهانی مانند حقوق بشر، توسعه، و شمول، دیدگاههای جدیدی را برای ارتقای سیاست و عمل و تسهیل تبادل بینالمللی ایدهها ارائه میدهند. این کتاب راهنما اولین متن مرجع اصلی است که پایه ای محکم از دانش را برای دانشجویان و محققین فراهم می کند. مجموعه گسترده 73 فصل ماهیت یکپارچه و ضروری دانش بینالمللی مددکاری اجتماعی را در تمام زمینههای عمل، سیاست و تحقیق تأیید میکند. فصلها به طور سیستماتیک موضوعات کلیدی، سازمانها، شایستگیها، نیازهای آموزشی و پژوهشی، و دستورالعملهای اخلاقی را که در عملکرد بینالمللی مددکاری اجتماعی امروزی هستند، ترسیم میکنند و بر پیوندهای میان کار اجتماعی، توسعه و عملکرد حقوق بشر تأکید میکنند. مطالعات موردی عمیق کشوری و مثالهای خطمشی، خوانندگان را تشویق میکند تا بفهمند که چگونه کارشان در مددکاری اجتماعی بر مسائل بینالمللی تأثیر میگذارد، صرف نظر از اینکه کار در داخل یا خارج از کشور انجام میشود. طیف گستردهای از مشارکتکنندگان که در زمینههای خود پیشرو هستند، به نمایندگی از تمام مناطق جهان، مجموعه جامعی را گردآوری کردهاند که نشاندهنده وضعیت فعلی کار اجتماعی بینالمللی است.
فهرست مطالب :
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Contents
The Editors and Advisory Board
Contributors
1. Introduction • Lynne M. Healy and Rosemary J. Link
Section I. Theories and Concepts Underlying International Social Work
2. Defining International Social Work • Lynne M. Healy
3. Globalization • Maureen Wilson
4. Development • James Midgley
5. Human Rights and Their Relevance for Social Work as Theory and Practice • Silvia Staub-Bernasconi
6. Social Exclusion and Inclusion • Karen Lyons and Nathalie Huegler
7. Social Justice • Dorothee Hölscher
Section II. History
8. The History of the Development of Social Work • Lynne M. Healy
9. Claiming Women’s Places in the World: Social Workers’ Roles in Eradicating Gender Inequalities Globally • Lena Dominelli
Section III. International Social Work Practice
10. Work With Immigrantsand Refugees • Uma A. Segal
11. International Adoption • Karen Smith Rotabi
12. Trauma Counseling • Allison Rowlands
13. International Social Service: Addressing the Need for Intercountry Casework • Felicity Northcott, Julie Gilbertrosicky, Andy Elvin, Jean Ayoub, and Christine Lambert
14. Social Developmentand Social Work • Doreen Elliott
15. Disaster Relief and Management: Readiness, Response, and Recovery • Golam M. Mathbor
16. Representing Social Work atthe United Nations and Other International Bodies • Robin Mama
17. Cultural Efficacy in Communication and Practice in Global Context • Lois Bosch
18. Cultural Conflict and Conflict Resolution • Ngoh Tiong Tan
Section IV. Global Social Issues
19. Global Aging • M. C. “Terry” Hokenstad and Moon Choi
20. Child Abuse and Neglect • Letnie F. Rock
21. Child Labor and Work • Dennis J. Ritchie
22. Child Soldiers • Joanne Corbin
23. Children in and of the Street • Kristin M. Ferguson
24. Community Violence • Horace Levy
25. Drugs: Addictions and Trafficking • Katherine van Wormer
26. Employment, Unemployment, and Decent Work • Tatsuru Akimoto
27. Environmental Degradation and Preservation • Christina L. Erickson
28. Ethnic Conflicts • Darja Zaviršek and Jelka Zorn
29. HIV/AIDS: The Global Pandemic • Hugo Kamya
30. Human Trafficking • Jini L. Roby
31. Indigenous Peoples and Cultural Survival • Jay T. Johnson and Michael Yellow Bird
32. Global Mental Health • Janice Wood Wetzel
33. Migration and Refugees • Karen Lyons and Nathalie Huegler
34. Natural and Human-Caused Disasters • Michael J. Zakour
35. Poverty and Human Needs • Vimla Nadkarni and Govind Dhaske
36. Racism and Antiracist Strategies • Narda Razack
37. SARS: A Case of a Global Health Threat • Ngoh Tiong Tan
38. Status of Women • Susan Mapp
39. Veterans, Soldiers, and Military Families • Jesse Harris
40. Violence Against Women • Susan Mapp
41. Youth • Lincoln O. Williams
Section V. International Profession and Professional Organizations
42. International Federation of Social Workers (IFSW) • Nigel Hall
43. International Association of Schools of Social Work (IASSW) • Lynne M. Healy
44. International Council on Social Welfare (ICSW) • Denys Correll
45. International Consortium for Social Development (ICSD) • Frank B. Raymond and Charles “Chuck” Cowger
46. Global Ethical Principles and Dilemmas • Elaine Congress
Section VI. Organizations and Institutions Involved in International Social Work
47. The United Nations Agencies • Stuart Wilson
48. Nongovernmental Organizations and Global Social Change • Kathryn Libal and Scott Harding
49. Regulators of the Global Economy: The IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO • Peta-Anne Baker and Kimberly Hinds
Section VII. International Social Work Education and Research
50. Models of Internationalizing Curriculum • Lynne M. Healy and Rosemary J. Link
51. International Field Placements • Patricia Lager and Sally Mathiesen
52. Models of International Exchange • Rosemary J. Link and Gabi Čačinovič Vogrinčič
53. Using Technology for International Education and Research • Thomas P. Felke and Goutham M. Menon
54. Comparative Cross-National Research (World Census) • Angeline Barretta-Herman
Section VIII. Social Work Around the World
55. Social Work in Africa 365lengwe-katembula mwansa
56. Social Work in Asia 372ngoh tiong tan
57. Social Work in Australia andNew Zealand 377carolyn noble and mary nash
58. Social Work in the Caribbean 383peta-anne baker andjohn maxwell
59. Social Work in Europe 388annamaria campanini
60. Social Work in Latin America 393irene queiro-tajalli
61. Social Work in North America 400julia watkins (united states),therese jennissen andcolleen lundy (canada)
Section IX. Poverty and Development
62. International Social Development Projects • Lorne Jaques and W. Duffie Vanbalkom
63. Measuring Social Well-Being • Lynne M. Healy
64. Microcredit: A Development Strategy for Poverty Reduction • Rebecca L. Thomas
65. Variations and Issues of Survival of European Welfare State Models in the Twenty-First Century • Sven Hessle
Section X. Human Rights
66. Overview of Human Rights: The UN Conventions and Machinery • Joseph Wronka
67. Women and the Human Rights Framework • Elisabeth Reichert
68. Children’s Rights • Rosemary J. Link
69. Human Rights of People With Disabilities • Gunn Strand Hutchinson
70. Human Rights and Sexual Orientation • Gary Bailey
Section XI. Conclusions: Toward the Future
71. International Careers in Social Work • Amy Bess and Rosemary J. Link
72. International Labor Mobility in Social Work • Karen Lyons and Nathalie Huegler
73. Conclusion • Rosemary J. Link
Appendix A. Ethics in Social Work: Statement of Principles
Appendix B. Global Standards for the Education and Training of the Social Work Profession
Appendix C. The Millennium Development Goals and Targets
Appendix D. The IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support: A Quick Guide for Social Workers • Martha Bragin
Index
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب به زبان اصلی :
Global knowledge is increasingly essential for all aspects of social work. Today's professionals respond to concerns including permeable borders, the upheavals of war, displaced workers, natural disasters, international adoption, and human trafficking. Everywhere, social workers work with service users and colleagues from diverse cultures and countries. Globally relevant concepts such as human rights, development, and inclusion offer new perspectives to enhance policy and practice and facilitate the international exchange of ideas. This handbook is the first major reference text to provide a solid foundation of knowledge for students and researchers alike. The extensive collection of 73 chapters confirms the integral and necessary nature of international social work knowledge to all areas of practice, policy, and research. Chapters systematically map the key issues, organizations, competencies, training and research needs, and ethical guidelines central to international social work practice today, emphasizing the linkages among social work, development, and human rights practice. In-depth country case studies and policy examples encourage readers to understand how their practice in social work touches on international issues, regardless of whether the work is done at home or abroad. Representing all regions of the world, a wide range of contributors that are leaders in their fields have put together an exhaustive collection that represents the state-of-play of international social work today.