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Empowering Social Workers, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2017 Virtuous Practitioners

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Pawar Manohar, Hugman Richard, Alexandra Andrew, Anscombe A. W. (Bill)

Couverture de l’ouvrage Empowering Social Workers

This book demonstrates the central role of ethical character in effective social work practice. Showcasing select biographies of social workers, it reveals how skilled practitioners have developed such core virtues as compassion, love, commitment, prudence, respect for human dignity and a critical sense of social justice through the course of their working lives, and how they apply these virtues in a wide variety of settings and situations to enhance the well-being of the people and communities they work with. As such, the book offers a powerful and inspiring resource to help educators, students and practitioners understand the unbreakable link between what social workers and other social welfare and social development professionals do and who they are, and thereby cultivate core qualities that should be promoted. 




 ?Pawar, Hugman, Alexandra and Anscombe have found a novel and creative way to explore virtues in social work by examining the career contributions of a group of social work practitioners engaged in ?virtuous action?. Their stories are inspiring and they provide much-needed role models for students and practitioners embarking on empowering practice? ? Dr. Mel Gray, Professor of Social Work, The University of Newcastle. New South Wales, Australia.

"In an age where the virtues of truth, cooperation and ?doing the right thing? are increasingly being eroded in public life, this book serves as both an inspiration and invaluable resource to all social work practitioners seeking to reflect on, and improve their practice" - Dr. Martin Ryan, Social Worker, Counsellor/Community Educator, Jesuit Social Services, Melbourne.

?The editors are to be commended for examining the virtuous characters of these ten professional social workers. The use of detailed biographies is an innovative and important approach which helps us to appreciate just what a tremendous impact the virtues can have." - Dr. Christian B. Miller, A. C. Reid Professor of Philosophy, Director, The Character Project, Wake Forest University, USA.


Chapter 1. Introduction: The role of virtues in social work practice.- Chapter 2. Voice to the voiceless.- Chapter 3. But you can push and push and push.- Chapter 4. Empower people to take control of their own lives.- Chapter 5. Respect and integrity.- Chapter 6. What can we do to make changes?.- Chapter 7. A people world, rather than a paper world.- Chapter 8. I cannot give up, I cannot give up on the children.- Chapter 9. You roll up your sleeves and work with people help people.- Chapter 10. Hunger for movement and action.- Chapter 11. What you know plays out in action.- Chapter 12. Virtue-led social work practice.

Manohar Pawar is Professor of Social Work at the School of Humanities and Social Sciences and a member of the Institute for Land and Water and Society, Charles Sturt University, Wagga Wagga, Australia. Manohar has over 30 years of social work education, research and practice experience in Australia and India and has published over 100 refereed journal articles, books and book chapters. His current areas of interest include virtue-led social work practice, international social development, social work and social policy, social aspects of climate change and water, social work education, informal care and ageing, NGOs and community development. Manohar is a recipient of a Faculty of Arts award for Academic Excellence (2009), the Australian Learning and Teaching Council citation award for Outstanding Contributions to Student Learning (2008) and an Association of Commonwealth Universities Quality of Life Award (2001). He is the president of the Asia-Pacific Branch of the International Consortium for Social Development (ICSD) and his recent books include Future Directions in Social Development (2017), Reflective Social Work Practice: Thinking, Doing and Being (2015) and Social and Community Development Practice (2014).

 

Richard Hugman is Professor of Social Work at the School of Social Sciences, the University of New Social Wales, Australia. His research interests include ethics for the caring professions, virtue ethics in social work, human rights and refugees settled in Australia, late life care, community and social welfare, mental health and the organization of social services. Richard is a qualified social worker who has spent a decade in practice. Since 2004 Richard has worked with UNICEF Vietnam to advise the Vietnam Government on the development of professional social work. Between 2002 and 2008 Richard was a member of the Ethics Committee of the International Federation of Social Workers and from 2008 to 2014 he was the Federation’s ethics c

Considers the personal qualities social workers need to be effective Offers a biographical approach to understanding the importance of virtues in social work Addresses a broad constituency of social work, welfare and community development practitioners and researchers. Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

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