Introduction - Mel Gray and Stephen A. Webb PART ONE: THEORISTS Jurgen Habermas - Stan Houston Anthony Giddens - Harry Ferguson Pierre Bourdieu - Paul Michael Garrett Michel Foucault - Jason Powell Judith Butler - Brid Featherstone and Lorraine Green PART TWO: THEORIES Attachment theory - David Howe Feminist social work - Joan Orme Critical social work - Mel Gray and Stephen A. Webb Structural social work - Kate Murray and Steven Hick Multiculturalism - Purnima Sundar and Mylan Ly Neoliberalism - Sue Penna and Martin O'Brien Postmodern social work - Barbara Fawcett PART THREE: PERSPECTIVES FOR PRACTICE Cognitive-behavioural approach - Eric L. Garland and A. Bruce Thyer Ecological approach - Fred Besthorn Social network analysis - Deirdre Kirke Ethnography - Jerry Floersch, Jeffrey Longhofer and Megan Nordquest Schwaille Ethnomethodology - Gerald de Montigny Discourse and reflexivity - Sue White Evidence-based practice - Debbie Plath Ways of knowing - Ian Shaw
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Praise for the first edition: 'An excellent book that provides a good deal of valuable material to stimulate debate and to alert readers of the need to engage more critically with the wider world in which social work is located. Professor Keith Popple, Professor of Social Work, London South Bank University This edition has retained the feeling of difference that came with the original and thus makes an alternative contribution to this genre of social work texts. It challenges its social worker readership to step outside familiar frameworks and discourse and to travel with the contributors through wider academic scenery and both recapture old connections and inform some new possibilities. It is a modern text, exploring a vast historical panorama, which successfully fuses theories of explanation with methods of intervention, enabling the reader to think about where today's theoretically informed social work practice has come from. -- Dr. Wulf Livingston