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What Is the Future of Social Work?

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Social work is under unprecedented pressure as a result of funding cuts, political interventions, marketisation and welfare transformations which, combined, are dramatically reshaping the relations...
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  • 01 November 2019
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Social work is under unprecedented pressure as a result of funding cuts, political interventions, marketisation and welfare transformations which, combined, are dramatically reshaping the relationship between individuals and the welfare state.

A wide range of distinguished academics provide a comprehensive analysis of the evolving challenges facing contemporary social work, reflecting on both the existential and ideological threats to the profession. As well as the chief practice areas of child protection, adult care and mental health, contributors also examine practice issues surrounding older people, neoliberalism, neo-eugenics and the refugee crisis.

This book offers concrete policy proposals for the future of the profession alongside valuable solutions which students and practitioners can action on the ground.

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Price: $127.95
Pages: 214
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Policy Press
Publication Date: 01 November 2019
ISBN: 9781447340812
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Social Work, Social work, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, Social and ethical issues
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Michael Lavalette is Professor in Social Work and Head of the School of Social Sciences at Liverpool Hope University. He has published widely on radical social work and contemporary social movements. He is co-editor of Critical and Radical Social Work journal.

Foreword ~ Peter Dowd

Introduction: what is the future of social work? ~ Michael Lavalette

Austerity and the context of social work today ~ Michael Lavalette

Contemporary developments in child protection in England: reform or reaction? ~ Brid Featherstone

The slow death of social work with older people? ~ Mark Lymbery

Mental health social work: the dog that hasn’t barked ~ Iain Ferguson

Learning disabilities and social work ~ Jan Walmsley

Social work by and for all ~ Peter Beresford

Anti-oppressive social work, neoliberalism and neo-eugenics ~ Gurnam Singh

From Seebohm factories to neoliberal production lines? The social work labour process ~ John Harris

Social work and the refugee crisis: reflections from Samos in Greece ~ Chris Jones

Conclusion: the road to an alternative future? ~ Michael Lavalette