ABSTRACT

Building on the successful 1st edition, this reader brings together some of the most significant ideas that have informed social work practice over the last fifty years. At the same time as presenting these foundational extracts, the book includes commentaries that allow the reader to understand the selected extracts on their own terms as well as to be aware of their relations to each other and to the wider social work context.

There is no settled view or easy consensus about what social work is and should be, and the ideas reflected in this volume are themselves diverse and complex. The world of social work has changed greatly over the last ten years, and this new edition reflects that change with new material on the decolonisation of social work knowledges, the greater emphasis on inter-disciplinarity and co-production and the new concern for identities.

With an accessible introduction to contextualise the selections, the book is divided into three main sections, each presenting key texts drawn from a wide range of perspectives: psychological, sociological, philosophical, educational and political, as well as perspectives that are grounded in the experiences of practitioners and those who use services, which have contributed to the development of:

  • the profession of social work
  • knowledge and values for social work and
  • practice in social work.

By providing students and practitioners with an easy way into reading first-hand some of the most interesting, foundational texts of the subject, it will be required reading for all undergraduate and postgraduate programmes and professionals undertaking post-qualifying training.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

Reading social work

part I|93 pages

The Profession of Social Work

chapter |1 pages

Commentary One

chapter 1|20 pages

Black history month

A provocation and a timeline

chapter 2|6 pages

But is it social work?

chapter 3|7 pages

The politics of social work

chapter 4|6 pages

Changes in the form of knowledge in social work

From the ‘social’ to the ‘informational’?

chapter 5|7 pages

The quest for a universal social work

Some issues and implications

chapter 6|4 pages

The (r)evolution and decolonization of social work ethics

The global social work statement of ethical principles

chapter 7|7 pages

Human rights practice

Possibilities and pitfalls for developing emancipatory social work

chapter 9|5 pages

Social work in a risk society

chapter 10|5 pages

Am I my brother's keeper?

chapter 11|6 pages

Research from the underside

chapter 12|4 pages

What is professional social work?

chapter 13|2 pages

The client speaks

chapter 14|6 pages

Service users and practitioners reunited

The key component for social work reform

part II|80 pages

Knowledge and Values for Social Work

chapter |1 pages

Commentary Two

chapter 15|4 pages

The sociological imagination

chapter 18|6 pages

Resilience

Some conceptual considerations

chapter 20|5 pages

There is an alternative

Homines curans and the limits of neoliberalism

chapter 21|4 pages

The social model of disability

chapter 28|6 pages

Green social work in theory and practice

A new environmental paradigm for the profession

part III|74 pages

Practice in Social Work

chapter |1 pages

Commentary Three

chapter 29|5 pages

On the nature of practice

chapter 30|4 pages

‘Radical Social Work’ by Roy Bailey and Mike Brake

A classic text revisited

chapter 37|6 pages

The strengths perspective in social work practice

Extensions and cautions

chapter 38|4 pages

Personalisation through participation

A new script for public services

chapter 40|6 pages

A review of Donald A. Schön's, The Reflective Practitioner

How Professionals Think in Action

chapter 41|4 pages

A casual kindness

The Unbound Community with Pádraig Ó Tuama