ABSTRACT

Thinking about gender can enrich the work of all groupwork practitioners and can make a real difference in people's lives. Based on practice experience in both the UK and the USA, Gender and Groupwork brings together the best of groupwork knowledge, skills and values in a true transatlantic partnership.
The book summarises the history of gender-based groups for both women and men and outlines a wide range of exciting and challenging examples of groups in different contexts. Often moving, and always engrossing, these accounts encompass groups for older women and women facing inequalities in health care. Innovative work with homeless people, with caregivers and lesbian and gay youth is described in detail and there is a particular focus on domestic violence, where groups can often the intervention of choice.
Gender and Groupwork demonstrates that, despite the challenges of post-structuralism and postmodernism, the practice of groupwork is alive and well. It provides new ideas and new models to help move practice forward, making it a welcome addition to the groupwork literature.

chapter |9 pages

Women in groups

The history of feminist empowerment

chapter |12 pages

Difference, collective action and women's groups

South Asian women in Britain

chapter |13 pages

Developing the capacity to address social context issues

Group treatment with African American men who batter

chapter |14 pages

Gendering work with children and youth

Groups for child witnesses of woman abuse

chapter |9 pages

Genderbending

Reflections on group work with queer 1 youth

chapter |16 pages

Women First

A self-directed group for women with and without learning disabilities 1 – our experiences 1990–99 The members of Women First

chapter |10 pages

From support to empowerment

Caregiver connections

chapter |11 pages

Challenges and issues facing older women

Potential role for empowerment-oriented groups

chapter |17 pages

Conclusion

Where does this leave us?