Social workers must often decide whether a child, at possible risk from its parents, should be removed from home. Each year some children, left at home, are abused or killed. If the procedures have been duly followed, is a bad result to be put down to incompetence or to bad luck, and, if to the latter, does that cancel moral responsibility? We examine the claim that the case is one of ‘moral luck’ and argue that the system licences greater risk than is morally justified. This is because it embodies conflicting imperatives of welfare and justice. Anyone who becomes a social worker must face a constant risk to moral integrity [1]
Contemporary ideas and strategies of both 'risk' and 'power' are significant and dynamic influences ...
This paper considers the idea that moral injury may result from social workers being exposed to sust...
This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social wo...
‘Risk’ in social work is typically read as risk-of-bads, and specifically extreme bads. This paper d...
Service users subject to section 41 of the Mental Health Act 1983 come under the scrutiny of both th...
This study explores how risk operates as a concept and practice in social workers’ interventions. Co...
Service users subject to section 41 of the Mental Health Act 1983 come under the scrutiny of both th...
Social work is often seen as a technical activity based on systems of specialist knowledge and evide...
This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social wo...
The research undertaken explored social work as a moral enterprise. The study explored social work p...
This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social wo...
There is no simple remedy that heals moral injuries. No decision-making algorithm will resolve these...
Social workers face especially hard moral choices. They are often caught between a rock and a hard p...
In this paper, we question the widely, if tacitly, held perspective that exceptional and immensely p...
Contemporary ideas and strategies of both 'risk' and 'power' are significant and dynamic influences ...
This paper considers the idea that moral injury may result from social workers being exposed to sust...
This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social wo...
‘Risk’ in social work is typically read as risk-of-bads, and specifically extreme bads. This paper d...
Service users subject to section 41 of the Mental Health Act 1983 come under the scrutiny of both th...
This study explores how risk operates as a concept and practice in social workers’ interventions. Co...
Service users subject to section 41 of the Mental Health Act 1983 come under the scrutiny of both th...
Social work is often seen as a technical activity based on systems of specialist knowledge and evide...
This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social wo...
The research undertaken explored social work as a moral enterprise. The study explored social work p...
This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social wo...
There is no simple remedy that heals moral injuries. No decision-making algorithm will resolve these...
Social workers face especially hard moral choices. They are often caught between a rock and a hard p...
In this paper, we question the widely, if tacitly, held perspective that exceptional and immensely p...
Contemporary ideas and strategies of both 'risk' and 'power' are significant and dynamic influences ...
This paper considers the idea that moral injury may result from social workers being exposed to sust...
This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social wo...