As a profession, social work has been slow in coming to grips with the ecological crisis. While there are some encouraging signs that this blind-spot is slowly being recognised, it remains the case that despite a long-held commitment to understanding people-in-environment, the non-human world, and our relationship with it, remains a peripheral concern for most social workers and indeed for the profession as a whole (McKinnon, 2008; Molyneux, 2010; Zapf, 2010). Social work education has an important role to play in bringing ecological concerns more fully into the vision of the profession. It is timely therefore to consider the way forward for social work education and to explore the ways in which the environment might be most effectively int...
In the context of the global ecological crisis, the profession of social work is increasingly shifti...
This article explores Australian social work's engagement with environmental concerns through a...
Ecological understanding is a consequence of deeply engaged learning. Can it be taught, or more accu...
As a profession, social work has been slow in coming to grips with the ecological crisis. While ther...
The nature and extent of the current ecological crisis raises the question: Does social work have a ...
Addressing the global environmental crisis will require both personal and social transformation. Adu...
Social work has a long tradition of being explicitly concerned with the 'person-in-environment',reco...
Transformative learning theory has emerged as an educational approach concerned with understanding a...
This paper explores the teaching of ecological literacy to social work students using an explicitly ...
The social work profession is increasingly being called upon to deal with the social consequences of...
Social work is a profession focused on people within their environments. This is reflected in codes ...
The social work profession has traditionally concerned itself with a wide variety of issues pertaini...
This paper seeks to add to the growing literature on environmental social work education which sugge...
In this chapter we describe our emerging approach to learning (learning ecology), provide examples o...
Social Ecology and Education addresses "ecological understanding" as a transformative educational is...
In the context of the global ecological crisis, the profession of social work is increasingly shifti...
This article explores Australian social work's engagement with environmental concerns through a...
Ecological understanding is a consequence of deeply engaged learning. Can it be taught, or more accu...
As a profession, social work has been slow in coming to grips with the ecological crisis. While ther...
The nature and extent of the current ecological crisis raises the question: Does social work have a ...
Addressing the global environmental crisis will require both personal and social transformation. Adu...
Social work has a long tradition of being explicitly concerned with the 'person-in-environment',reco...
Transformative learning theory has emerged as an educational approach concerned with understanding a...
This paper explores the teaching of ecological literacy to social work students using an explicitly ...
The social work profession is increasingly being called upon to deal with the social consequences of...
Social work is a profession focused on people within their environments. This is reflected in codes ...
The social work profession has traditionally concerned itself with a wide variety of issues pertaini...
This paper seeks to add to the growing literature on environmental social work education which sugge...
In this chapter we describe our emerging approach to learning (learning ecology), provide examples o...
Social Ecology and Education addresses "ecological understanding" as a transformative educational is...
In the context of the global ecological crisis, the profession of social work is increasingly shifti...
This article explores Australian social work's engagement with environmental concerns through a...
Ecological understanding is a consequence of deeply engaged learning. Can it be taught, or more accu...