The world in which social work operates today is a very different world from that in which most of us took their social work training, and the changes we are facing are profound. This paper argues that these changes are not merely a regime change in social policy but that they are essentially about a re-ordering of social relationships and attempt to model them on neo-liberal ideas. In view of these pressures it is understandable that social workers often try to ignore those changes and withdraw into a private world of therapeutic relationships in which the methods they trained in are made to be still valid, or they simply go along with new service delivery designs without asking too many questions. Both reactions fail to question what the ...
Social Work, from its beginnings as a profession, considered social justice as its fundamental ethic...
This chapter considers how neoliberal economic and social policy has influenced social work, asserti...
As a practitioner, a manager and a scientist in social work for 40 years, I am still intrigued by th...
This article engages with literature on the neoliberalisation of social work but advances the debate...
There are increasing signs that the neo-liberal order, which has been the norm for Western democraci...
Globalization has played a major role in redefining the nature of the welfare state and the ways in ...
Social work is now an organised occupation on all continents of the world (Barnes and Hugman 2002). ...
Since the 1980s, social workers have increasingly left the service of the public sector and entered ...
Decades of neoliberalism in the UK have resulted in the depoliticization of social work. In its plac...
A commentary on previously published work submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the...
In most Western countries, the professional status of social workers is instable and insecure. Of co...
The present paper states that social work constitute at same time a political economy and a critical...
This paper attempts to locate contemporary developments and tensions in social work within current d...
Collectively, the contributors to this book seek to devise a 'new politics' for social work in the b...
This paper argues that social work is defined less by any intrinsic qualities and more by its relati...
Social Work, from its beginnings as a profession, considered social justice as its fundamental ethic...
This chapter considers how neoliberal economic and social policy has influenced social work, asserti...
As a practitioner, a manager and a scientist in social work for 40 years, I am still intrigued by th...
This article engages with literature on the neoliberalisation of social work but advances the debate...
There are increasing signs that the neo-liberal order, which has been the norm for Western democraci...
Globalization has played a major role in redefining the nature of the welfare state and the ways in ...
Social work is now an organised occupation on all continents of the world (Barnes and Hugman 2002). ...
Since the 1980s, social workers have increasingly left the service of the public sector and entered ...
Decades of neoliberalism in the UK have resulted in the depoliticization of social work. In its plac...
A commentary on previously published work submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the...
In most Western countries, the professional status of social workers is instable and insecure. Of co...
The present paper states that social work constitute at same time a political economy and a critical...
This paper attempts to locate contemporary developments and tensions in social work within current d...
Collectively, the contributors to this book seek to devise a 'new politics' for social work in the b...
This paper argues that social work is defined less by any intrinsic qualities and more by its relati...
Social Work, from its beginnings as a profession, considered social justice as its fundamental ethic...
This chapter considers how neoliberal economic and social policy has influenced social work, asserti...
As a practitioner, a manager and a scientist in social work for 40 years, I am still intrigued by th...