ABSTRACT

Home is a complex and multifaceted concept. This book revisions how ‘home’ is used in social work literature by showing how it is positioned as being discursively represented, materially experienced and embodied, and multiply imagined as symbolic and existential.

Drawing on multidisciplinary understandings of 'home' and intersectionality, it analyses the privileging and disadvantaging social policies and complex interactional practices that contribute to one’s sense of home including homelessness, mobility and the politics and complexities of homeownership. Providing social workers with practice considerations for different areas of social work, this book analyses how to makes and build a sense of home and community belonging for a broad range of client groups.

It will be of interest to all academics and students of social work, sociology, public policy, housing policy, gender studies and human geography.

chapter 1|9 pages

Stolen Homes

Prologue

chapter 2|15 pages

The complexities of home in social work

Introduction

part 1|53 pages

Revisioning home in social work

part 2|126 pages

Practice considerations

chapter 6|17 pages

Without a house and home

Homelessness

chapter 7|13 pages

The safety of home

Violence against women

chapter 8|11 pages

Imagining family homes

chapter 10|15 pages

Multiple, dislocated homes

chapter 14|6 pages

Revisioning home in social work

Conclusion