Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
Purchase Benefits
What is included with this book?
Welfare Theory and Approaches | |
Perspectives on the Development of Welfare | |
Citizenship and Social Class | |
The Three Political Economies of the Welfare State | |
The New Politics of the Welfare State | |
Welfarism, Governance and the State | |
Some Contradictions of the Modern Welfare State | |
Society, the State, Social Problems and Social Policy | |
Relief, Labour and Civil Disorder: An overview | |
The Changing Governance of Welfare: Recent trends in its primary functions, scale, and modes of coordination | |
Welfare Professionals and Street Level Bureaucrats | |
Professional Work | |
Am I my Brother's Keeper? | |
The Professional is Political | |
Street-level Bureaucrats as Policy Makers | |
Gender, Care and the Subject of Welfare | |
Women and Social Welfare | |
Gender and the Development of Welfare Regimes | |
The Concept of Social Care and the Analysis of Contemporary Welfare States | |
Good-enough Principles for Welfare | |
Democratic Subjects | |
Welfare and Social Development | |
Growth, Redistribution, and Welfare: Toward social investment | |
The Place of Social Capital in Understanding Social and Economic Outcomes | |
Social Work Practice | |
Practice Perspectives | |
Is Social Work a Profession? | |
The Problem-Solving Work | |
Is Casework Effective? A review | |
Conceptions of Social Work | |
The Life Model of Social Work Practice: An overview | |
Behavioral Social Work: Past, present, and future | |
The Strengths Perspective in Social Work Practice: Extensions and cautions | |
Knowledge for Practice | |
Knowledge for Social Work | |
Boundaries of Social Work or Social Work of Boundaries | |
Notes on the Form of Knowledge in Social Work | |
Many Ways of Knowing | |
The Knowledge Base of Social Work Practice: Theory, wisdom, analogue, or art | |
The Ethical Implications of Current Theoretical Developments in Social Work | |
The Theory and Practice relationship | |
Some Thoughts on the Relationship between Theory and Practice in and for Social Work | |
Surface and Depth in Social Work Practice | |
Practice Assessment | |
Reflections on the Assessment of Outcomes in Child Care | |
Common Errors of Reasoning in Child Protection Work | |
Practicing Empowerment | |
Rethinking Empowerment | |
Empowerment and Oppression: An indissoluble pairing for contemporary social work | |
Empowering Practice: Understanding and managing user-worker processes | |
Social Work Research | |
Mapping the Social Work Research Agenda | |
Cutting Edge Issues in Social Work Research | |
Confirmational Response Bias among Social Work Journals | |
A Code of Ethics for Social Work and Social Care Research | |
Research Note: Research and empowerment | |
Qualitative Social Work Research | |
The Social Work Context for Qualitative Research | |
Does the Glove Really Fit? Qualitative research and clinical social work practice | |
Theorizing from Practice: Towards an inclusive approach for social work research | |
Issues of Visibility and Colleague Relationships | |
Researching Reflective Practice | |
Schon Shock: A case for refraining reflection-in-action? | |
There's No Such Thing as Reflection | |
Evidence-based Social Work | |
Developing Empirically Based Models of Practice | |
Evidence-Based Social Care: Wheels off the runway? | |
Some Considerations on the Validity of Evidence-based Practice in Social Work | |
The Validity of Evidence-Based Practice in Social Work: A reply to Stephen Webb | |
Evidence-Based Practice: Counterarguments and objections | |
Evidence-Based Practice and Social Work | |
Critical Perspectives | |
The Relationship between Qualitative and Quantitative Research: Paradigm loyalty versus methodological eclecticism | |
Science, Research, and Social Work: Who controls the profession | |
The Quest for Evidence-Based Practice? We are all positivists! | |
Evaluation with One Eye Closed: The empiricist agenda in social work research | |
The Limits of Positivism in Social Work Research | |
Beyond Retroduction?-Hermeneutics, reflexivity and social work practice | |
Future Challenges | |
The Future(s) of Social Work | |
The Social Work Revolution | |
Social Work Practice in the 21st Century | |
The Movement of Social Work to Private Practice (and Away From the Poor) | |
Social Work in the University | |
Social Work at the Crossroads | |
The Future of Social Work as a Profession | |
Social Work, Modernity and Postmodernity | |
Social Work, Modernity and Post Modernity | |
Modernity, Postmodernity and Social Work | |
Deprofessionalizing Social Work: Anti-oppressive practice, competencies and postmodernism | |
Problematics of Government, (Post) Modernity and Social Work | |
Parton, Howe and Postmodernity: A critical comment on mistaken identity | |
New Policies and Technologies | |
Mapping Child-Care Social Work in the Final Years of the Twentieth Century: A critical response to the 'looking after children' system' | |
Tough Love: Social work, social exclusion and the third way | |
The Impact of Audit on Social Work Practice | |
Clinical Practice Guidelines: Should social work develop them? | |
Interprofessionality in Health and Social Care: The Achilles' heel of partnership? | |
Service Users, Social Policy and the Future of Welfare | |
International Social Work | |
Professionalization in Social Work: The challenge of diversity | |
Issues in International Social Work: Resolving critical debates in the profession | |
Local Orders and Global Chaos in Social Work | |
Defining Social Work for the 21st Century | |
Dilemmas of International Social Work: Paradoxical processes in indigenization, universalism and imperialism | |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.
The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.