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Reading Foucault for Social Work
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03 March 1999
This is the first book-length introduction to the work of Michel Foucault in social work. The social work profession is being challenged today to adapt to changing societal and cultural conditions and to carve out a new societal niche. Foucault's work offers a particularly relevant entry point for revisiting social work's mission, activities, and objectives. A critical reexamination of its practices, institutional arrangements, and knowledge helps us to envision alternative social work practices and strategies for social change.
Each chapter emphasizes different notions from Foucault's writings. Contributions include conceptual, philosophical, and methodological considerations, and discussions from various fields and levels of practice. The book covers policy in child welfare and child protection; gay-lesbian youth services; grief work and the family; client-worker interaction in a welfare office; and the social movement of the elderly. It includes a rountable discussion with Foucault on social work and a glossary.
1 Social Work in Perspective
1 The Culture of Social Work, by Laura Epstein
2Waiting for Foucault: Social Work and the Multitudinous Truth(s) of Life, by Allan Irving
3Foucault's Approach: Making the Familiar Visible, by Adrienne S. Chambon
4Social Work, Social Control, and Normalization: Roundtable Discussion with Michel Foucault
2 Social Work Practices and Knowledges Reconsidered
5Reconfiguring Child Welfare Practices: Risk Advanced Liberalism, and the Government of Freedom, by Nigel Parton
6Contested Territory: Sexualities and Social Work, by Carol-Anne O'Brien
7Foucault and Therapy: The Disciplining of Grief, by Catherine E. Foote and Arthur W. Frank
8Resistance and Old Age: The Subject Behind the American Seniors'Movement, by Frank T. Y. Wang
9Surveillance and Government of the Welfare Recipient, by Ken Moffatt
10Postmodernity, Ethnography, and Foucault, by John Devine
11 Conclusion:Issues to Look Forward to, by Adrienne S. Chambon and Allan Irving