ABSTRACT

The Anthropology of Welfare provides an overview of what anthropology has to offer welfare studies and vice-versa.
Case studies from anthropologists in the field, examine different branches of welfare and community care, for example:
* Maternity services
* Children with learning difficulties
* Children's homes
* Mothers' centres
* People with HIV
* Mental health centres
* Housing
* Care and provision for the elderly.
Contributors focus on comparative welfare systems - examples are taken from urban and rural areas of the UK, USA, Sweden, Germany, Portugal, and New Zealand. In each case the theoretical and methodological appropriateness of social anthropology for the study of welfare, and the insights gained by bringing anthropology and welfare together are examined.
The Anthropology of Welfare will be essential reading for those studying anthropology, social work and social policy and will be of interest to teachers, practitioners and researchers in applied social welfare fields.

chapter Chapter 5|24 pages

‘Equal, but different’?

Welfare, gender ideology and a ‘mothers’ centre’ in southern Germany

chapter Chapter 6|23 pages

The co-operation concept in a team of Swedish social workers

Applying grid and group to studies of community care

chapter Chapter 7|17 pages

Caring communities or effective networks?

Community care and people with learning difficulties in South Wales

chapter Chapter 8|24 pages

Staff models and practice

Managing ‘trouble’ in a community-based programme for chronically mentally ill adults in the USA

chapter Chapter 9|22 pages

A local anthropology of exclusion

chapter Chapter 10|26 pages

Considering the culture of community care

Anthropological accounts of the experiences of frontline carers, older people and a researcher

chapter Chapter 11|19 pages

Treasures on Earth

Housing assets, public policy and older people in New Zealand 1

chapter Chapter 13|16 pages

Using experiential research methods

The potential contribution of humanistic groupwork methods to anthropology and welfare research