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Bibliografická citace

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BK
First published
London ; New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2019
xliv, 609 stran : ilustrace ; 26 cm

ISBN 978-1-138-57843-2 (vázáno)
Routledge international handbooks
Obsahuje bibliografie, bibliografické odkazy a rejstřík
001479415
Contents // List of contributors // Foreword: Critical social work and social justice // JAN FOOK // Acknowledgements // Introduction: Critical social work and the politics of transformation // STEPHEN A. WEBB // • • // Xlt // XXV // xxix // XXX // PART // Historical, social and political influences // 1 // Welfare words, neoliberalism and critical social work // 3 // Paul Michael Garrett // 2 Neoliberal relations of poverty and the welfare state // Sanford F. Schram // 15 // 3 Marxist social work: an international and historical perspective // 24 // 4 // Tom Vickers // Critical social work in the U.S.: challenges and conflicts // 35 // Michael Reisch // 5 The rise of the global state paradigm: implications for social work // Paul Stepney // 46 // PART II % // Mapping the theoretical and conceptual terrain 59 // 6 Critical theory and critical social work 61 // Edward Granter // vii // Contents // 7 Re-imagining social theory for social work 72 // Christopher Thorpe // 8 Anarchism and social work 82 // Mark Baldwin // 9 Relational constructivism and relational social work 93 // Bjorn Kraus // 10 Extending Bourdieu for critical social work 105 // Stan Houston // 11 Why psychosocial thinking is critical 115 // Liz Frost // 12 Feminist contributions to critical social work 126 // Viviene E. Cree and Ruth Phillips // 13 The politics of Michel Foucault 137 // Paul Michael Garrett // 14 Resistance, biopolitics and radical passivity 148 // Stephen A. Webb // PART HI // Methods
of engagement and modes of analysis 161 // 15 Critical race theory and social work 163 // Monique Constance-Huggins . // 16 Indigenous peoples and communities: a critical theory perspective 171 // Brent Angell // 17 Postcolonial feminist social work 182 // Anne C. Deepak // 18 Critical discourse analysis and social work 194 // Karen D. Roscoe // 19 Controversy analysis: contributions to the radical agenda 206 // Natalia Farmer // 20 Narrative analysis and critical social work 218 // Sam Larsson // viii // Contents // PART IV // Critical contexts for practice and policy // IV.1 Issues, geographies and politics // 21 Green social work, political ecology and environmental justice // Lena Dominelli // 22 Securitising social work: counter terrorism, extremism, // and radicalisation // Jo Finch and David McKendrick // 23 Issues of ageing, social class, and poverty // Malcolm Carey // 24 Critical social work in the new urban age // Charlotte Williams // 25 Parents organizing a grassroots movement to // reform child welfare // David Tobis // 26 Incorporating rurality into a critical ethics of intellectual // disability care // Lia Bryant and Bridget Garnham // 27 Neoliberal regimes of welfare in Scandinavia // Edgar Marthinsen // 28 Performativity and sociomaterial becoming: // what technologies do // Lucas D. Introna // IV.2 Justice, empowerment and service users // 29 Challenging scapegoating mechanisms: mimetic desire // and self-directed groupwork // Stan Houston and Stephen Coulter
// 30 Vulnerability and the myth of autonomy // Ian Cummins // 31 Foodbanks, austerity and critical social work // Sarah Pollock // 231 // 233 // 244 // 256 // 267 // 278 // 289 // 302 // 312 // 325 // 327 // 339 // 349 // IX // Contents // 32 Ageing, veterans and offending: challenges for critical social work 361 // Paul Taylor and Jason Powell // 33 "Do you really want this in front of a judge?" Age assessment with // unaccompanied refugee children 372 // Calum Lindsay // % // 34 Toward a multispecies home: bedbugs and the politics of // non-human relations 390 // Heather Lynch // 35 Adoption, child rescue, maltreatment and poverty 401 // June Thoburn and Brigid Featherstone // 36 Critical debates in child protection: the production of risk // in changing times 412 // Emily Keddell and Tony Stanley // 37 LGBT issues and critical social work 424 // Urban Nothdurfter // PART V // Professional education and socialisation 435 // 38 Promoting activism and critical social work education 437 // Christine Morley // 39 Social work education and the challenge of neoliberal // hegemony 449 // Jane Fenton // 40 Embedding critical reflection across the curriculum 462 // Fiona Gardner // 41 Contesting doxa in social work education 473 // Liz Beddoe // 42 Insinuating: understanding approaches to critical practice 484 // Cynthiaj. Gallop // 43 Responding to neoliberalism in social work education: // a neo-Gramscian approach 496 // John Wallace and Bob Pease // X // Contents // PART VI // Future
challenges, directions and transformations 509 // 44 Reprioritising social work practice: towards a critical // reconnection of the personal and the social 511 // Peter Beresford and Suzy Croft // 45 Responding to political polarization: the new social // work radicalism 523 // Iain Ferguson // 46 Popular social work 536 // Michael Lavalette // 47 Challenging harmful political contexts through activism 549 // Linda Briskman // 48 Imperialism, colonialism and a Marxist epistemology of // �critical peace’ 560 // Basilios loakimidis and Nicos Trimikliniotis // Index // 572

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