Theories for practice
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] C. Campbell. The Search for Congruency: Developing Strategies for Anti-Oppressive Social Work Pedagogy , 2002 .
[2] C. Morley,et al. The Continued Importance of a Feminist Analysis: Making Gendered Inequalities Visible through a Critique of Howard Government Policy on Domestic Violence , 2008 .
[3] Sarah S. Amsler,et al. From ‘therapeutic’ to political education: the centrality of affective sensibility in critical pedagogy , 2011 .
[4] P. Singer. Speciesism and Moral Status , 2009 .
[5] Victor J. Friedman,et al. Negotiating Reality , 2005 .
[6] H. Marchant. A Feminist Perspective on the Development of the Social Work Profession in New South Wales , 1985 .
[7] J. Fook. Reflexivity as Method , 1999 .
[8] Gurnam Singh,et al. A Critical Analysis of Service User Struggles , 2014 .
[9] N. Thompson. Theorizing Social Work Practice , 2010 .
[10] D. Landry,et al. “Recovering our Stories”: A Small Act of Resistance , 2012 .
[11] P. Garrett. Social Work and Social Theory , 2013 .
[12] C. Morley,et al. Putting Gender Back on the Agenda in Domestic and Family Violence Policy and Service Responses: Using Critical Reflection to Create Cultural Change , 2016 .
[13] T. Walter. Grief and culture , 2010 .
[14] E. Tseris. Thinking Critically about ‘Mental Health Issues’ Affecting Women During/After Violence , 2016 .
[15] Thomas Ryan. Animals and Social Work: A Moral Introduction , 2011 .
[16] Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka. Progress towards gender parity still slow, uneven - Interview: Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Executive Director, UN Women , 2016 .
[17] T. Piketty. Capital in the twenty-first century: a multidimensional approach to the history of capital and social classes. , 2013, The British journal of sociology.
[18] M. Krumer‐Nevo. Poverty-Aware Social Work: A Paradigm for Social Work Practice with People in Poverty , 2016 .
[19] D. Webb. Pedagogies of Hope , 2013 .
[20] Alan Blair. Social Research , 1935, Nature.
[21] E. Speed,et al. Uncovering recovery: The resistible rise of recovery and resilience , 2012 .
[22] C. Morley,et al. The Nexus between Feminism and Postmodernism: Still a Central Concern for Critical Social Work , 2012 .
[23] J. Thomson. The mission of critical social work and the statutory child protection system in Australia: Resisting neoliberal encroachment , 2016 .
[24] Makere Stewart-Harawira. Cultural Studies, Indigenous Knowledge and Pedagogies of Hope , 2005 .
[25] B. Humphries. Social Work Research for Social Justice , 2008 .
[26] P. Deegan. Recovery: The lived experience of rehabilitation. , 1988 .
[27] Ann Curry-Stevens. New Forms of Transformative Education , 2007 .
[28] Merlinda Weinberg. Professional Privilege, Ethics and Pedagogy , 2015 .
[29] E. Segal,et al. Critical Theory: Pathway from Dichotomous to Integrated Social Work Practice , 2010 .
[30] J. Fook. Modern Social Work Theory , 2013 .
[31] P. Garrett. Examining the ‘Conservative Revolution’: Neoliberalism and Social Work Education , 2010 .
[32] D. Mandell. POWER, CARE AND VULNERABILITY: CONSIDERING USE OF SELF IN CHILD WELFARE WORK , 2008 .
[33] Nicole Hennum. Children's confidences, parents’ confessions: Child welfare dialogues as technologies of control , 2012 .
[34] Dorothy Bottrell,et al. Changes and Exchanges in Marginal Youth Transitions , 2007 .
[35] L. Swartz,et al. ‘Ah, but the whiteys love to talk about themselves’: discomfort as a pedagogy for change , 2010 .
[36] P. Leonard,et al. Social work practice under capitalism , 1978 .
[37] Anette Ejsing. Power and Caution: The Ethics of Self‐Disclosure , 2007 .
[38] H. Drabkin,et al. Letter from the guest editors , 2010, Cell adhesion & migration.
[39] A. Gibbs. The Changing Nature and Context of Social Work Research , 2001 .
[40] D. Dutton,et al. A Review of Domestic Violence Risk Instruments , 2000 .
[41] F. Gardner. Being Critically Reflective , 2014 .
[42] E. Webb,et al. Can Real Property Law Play a Role in Addressing Housing Vulnerability? The Case of Older Women Experiencing Housing Stress and Homelessness , 2018, Law in Context. A Socio-legal Journal.
[43] E. Harrison. Bouncing back? Recession, resilience and everyday lives , 2013 .
[44] M. Alston. Rural male suicide in Australia. , 2012, Social science & medicine.
[45] J. Yorke,et al. Where the rubber hits the road: Neuroscience and social work , 2018, Social work in health care.
[46] Maurice J. Moreau. A structural approach to social work practice , 1979 .
[47] C. Morley. The dominance of risk assessment in child protection: Is it risky? , 2003 .
[48] Yuk-Lin Renita Wong. Knowing Through Discomfort: A Mindfulness-based Critical Social Work Pedogogy , 2004 .
[49] M. Gray,et al. The environment and social work: An overview and introduction , 2012 .
[50] A. Hartman. Words Create Worlds , 1991 .
[51] S. Rees. Managerialism in social welfare: Proposals for a humanitarian alternative–an australian perspective , 1999 .
[52] G. Nanson,et al. Cranebrook Terrace Revisited , 2004 .
[53] M. Lovejoy. Recovery from schizophrenia: a personal odyssey. , 1984, Hospital & community psychiatry.
[54] J. Gray. (Re)considering Voice , 2007 .
[55] J. Fook,et al. Transforming Social Work Practice , 1999 .
[56] C. Morley,et al. The neoliberal colonisation of social work education: A critical analysis and practices for resistance , 2017 .
[57] Yasmin Dean,et al. Social Workers Without Borders: Voices for Justice , 2016 .
[58] JoAnn P. McFall,et al. THE CHANGING CONTEXT OF SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE: IMPLICATIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR SOCIAL WORK EDUCATORS , 1997 .
[59] Jacob P. Hochard,et al. The Impacts of Climate Change on the Poor in Disadvantaged Regions , 2018, Review of Environmental Economics and Policy.
[60] Sue Green,et al. Cultural responsiveness and social work: A discussion , 2016 .
[61] K. Willis. Theories and Practices of Development , 2005 .
[62] Shari E. Miller,et al. Environmental shifts for social work: A principles approach , 2012 .
[63] J. Yates,et al. Housing and Mortgage Markets in Turbulent Times: Is Australia Different? , 2011 .
[64] M. Gray,et al. Environmental ethics for social work: Social work's responsibility to the non-human world , 2012 .
[65] J. Read,et al. Models of Madness : Psychological, Social and Biological Approaches to Schizophrenia , 2004 .
[66] S. Kirk,et al. Moving Canadian governmental policies beyond a focus on individual lifestyle: some insights from complexity and critical theories , 2010, Health promotion international.
[67] Jan Fook,et al. The importance of pet loss and some implications for services , 2005 .
[68] Rosalind Aveling,et al. A horizon scan of global conservation issues for 2014 , 2014, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[69] S. Kemp,et al. Embodied practice: claiming the body's experience, agency, and knowledge for social work. , 2002, Social work.
[70] Georgina Ramsay. Forced Childlessness and Ruptured Personhood: The Politics of Motherhood for Central African Refugee Women Resettled in Australia , 2017 .
[71] M. Pack. An Evaluation of Critical-Reflection on Service-Users and Their Families' Narratives as a Teaching Resource in a Post-Graduate Allied Mental Health Program: An Integrative Approach , 2013 .
[72] EdD Amy B. Rossiter Msw. A Perspective on Critical Social Work , 2008 .
[73] L. Cooper. Edna Chamberlain (1921 -2005): A Leader through Times of Transition and Change , 2009 .
[74] Nancy A. Naples,et al. Marriage, the Final Frontier? Same‐Sex Marriage and the Future of the Lesbian and Gay Movement , 2018 .
[75] I. Duncan,et al. The changing concept of animal sentience , 2006 .
[76] D. Bessarab,et al. Aboriginal Practitioners Speak Out: Contextualising Child Protection Interventions , 2010 .
[77] Merlinda Weinberg. Paradoxes in Social Work Practice: Mitigating Ethical Trespass , 2016 .
[78] Neville R Ellis,et al. Ecological grief as a mental health response to climate change-related loss , 2018, Nature Climate Change.
[79] Anna M. Scheyett,et al. Walking our talk in Social Work Education: partnering with consumers of Mental Health Services , 2004 .
[80] Karen L. Martin,et al. Ways of knowing, being and doing: A theoretical framework and methods for indigenous and indigenist re‐search , 2003 .
[81] C. Morley,et al. A Critical Social Work Response To Wealth And Income Inequality , 2016 .
[82] P. H. Cabinetmaker. What is social work? , 1948, The Indian journal of social work.
[83] F. Reamer. Social work in a digital age: ethical and risk management challenges. , 2013, Social work.
[84] J. Ostry,et al. Redistribution, Inequality, and Growth , 2014 .
[85] WoodburyZhiwa. Climate Crisis and the Cosmic Bomb: Is the American Dream an Expression of Cultural Trauma? , 2015 .
[86] G. Craig. Poverty, Social Work and Social Justice , 2002 .
[87] A. Grenier. RECOGNIZING AND RESPONDING TO LOSS AND ‘RUPTURE’ IN OLDER WOMEN'S ACCOUNTS , 2008 .
[88] Gurnam Singh,et al. The social worker as intellectual , 2009 .
[89] G. Pheterson. Alliances between Women: Overcoming Internalized Oppression and Internalized Domination , 1986, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.
[90] Gabrielle Meagher,et al. Modernising Social Work and the Ethics of Care , 2004 .
[91] E. Plionis. Teaching Students How to Avoid Errors in Theory Application , 2004 .
[92] F. Mishna,et al. The relevance of contemporary psychodynamic theories to teaching social work , 2003 .
[93] D. Pilgrim. Recovery From Mental Health Problems: Scratching The Surface Without Ethnography , 2009 .
[94] Ruth Phillips,et al. Undoing an activist response: feminism and the Australian government's domestic violence policy , 2006 .
[95] Catherine McDonald,et al. Feeling Motivated Yet?: Long-term Unemployed People's Perspectives on the Implementation of Workfare in Australia , 2008 .
[96] K. Healy. Social Work Methods and Skills , 2012 .
[97] Tony N. Brown,et al. Critical race theory speaks to the sociology of mental health: mental health problems produced by racial stratification. , 2003, Journal of health and social behavior.
[98] Heather D'Cruz,et al. Reflexivity, its Meanings and Relevance for Social Work: A Critical Review of the Literature , 2005 .
[99] WhiteBenjamin,et al. States of Emergency: Trauma and Climate Change , 2015 .
[100] L. Dominelli,et al. Anti-oppressive social work theory and practice , 2003 .
[101] S. Poynting,et al. The new integrationism, the state and Islamophobia: retreat from multiculturalism in Australia , 2008 .
[102] D. Baines. ‘If We Don't Get Back to Where We Were Before’: Working in the Restructured Non-Profit Social Services , 2010 .
[103] H. Spandler. From Social Exclusion to Inclusion? A Critique of the Inclusion Imperative in Mental Health , 2007 .
[104] H. Fraser,et al. Planting a seed: encouraging service users towards educational goals , 2015 .
[105] Robert L. Flood. Liberating Systems Theory , 1990 .
[106] J. Manley. Globalization, Welfare States, and Socialism's Future , 2015 .
[107] M. Gray. Postcards from the West: Mapping the Vicissitudes of Western Social Work , 2008 .
[108] Selma Macfarlane,et al. Teaching Critical Reflection: A Tool for Transformative Learning in Social Work? , 2011 .
[109] Julie Mostov. Karl Marx as Democratic Theorist , 1989, Polity.
[110] Guy Widdershoven,et al. Cognitive Psychology and Hermeneutics: Two Approaches to Meaning and Mental Disorder , 1999 .
[111] D. McAuliffe,et al. Leave No Stone Unturned: The Inclusive Model of Ethical Decision Making , 2008 .
[112] David Howe,et al. A Brief Introduction to Social Work Theory , 2009 .
[113] P. Fronek,et al. Moral outrage: social workers in the Third Space , 2016 .
[114] Holly Echo-Hawk. Indigenous Communities and Evidence Building , 2011, Journal of psychoactive drugs.
[115] D. Cheal. Dimensions of Sociological Theory , 2005 .
[116] Tony N. Brown,et al. Race, racism, and mental health: elaboration of critical race theory's contribution to the sociology of mental health , 2008 .
[117] L. Clare,et al. Escape, enlightenment and endurance , 2004, Anthropology & medicine.
[118] Debbie Kramer-Roy,et al. Using participatory and creative methods to facilitate emancipatory research with people facing multiple disadvantage: a role for health and care professionals , 2015 .
[119] Micheal L. Shier,et al. Challenging ‘ableism’ and teaching about disability in a social work classroom , 2019, Critical Social Work.
[120] H. Hair,et al. Culturally Relevant, Socially Just Social Work Supervision: Becoming Visible Through a Social Constructionist Lens , 2009 .
[121] Linda Davies,et al. ‘FOR THE SAKE OF THE CHILDREN’: MAKING SENSE OF CHILDREN AND CHILDHOOD IN THE CONTEXT OF CHILD PROTECTION , 2008 .
[122] Terry Hyland. The Limits of Mindfulness: Emerging Issues for Education , 2016 .
[123] Ericka Kimball,et al. Virtual boundaries: ethical considerations for use of social media in social work. , 2013, Social work.
[124] Nicole Nicotera,et al. Beyond Diversity Courses: Strategies for Integrating Critical Consciousness Across Social Work Curriculum , 2009 .
[125] Zoe Rathus. Mapping the use of social science in Australian courts: the example of family law children’s cases , 2016 .
[126] Natalie Helbig,et al. Risky Business: Applying Ethical Standards to Social Media Use with Vulnerable Populations , 2015 .
[127] H Schaefer,et al. [The problem of diagnosis]. , 1971, Die Medizinische Welt.
[128] Vicki Coppock,et al. Understanding Social Work Practice in Mental Health , 2009 .
[129] S. Timimi. Critical Child Psychiatry , 2006 .
[130] Houston,et al. Developing critical social work in theory and in practice: child protection and communicative reason , 1999 .
[131] Joanna P. Williams. Academic Freedom in an Age of Conformity , 2016 .
[132] H. Goldstein. The neglected moral link in social work practice. , 1987, Social work.
[133] Felicia L. Wilson. Identifying, Preventing, and Addressing Job Burnout and Vicarious Burnout for Social Work Professionals , 2016, Journal of evidence-informed social work.
[134] L. Dominelli,et al. Feminist Social Work , 1989 .
[135] Amy B. Rossiter. Unsettled Social Work: The Challenge of Levinas's Ethics , 2011 .
[136] Anthony Mcmahon. Redefining the beginnings of social work in Australia , 2003 .
[137] Stephen A. Webb,et al. Towards a 'new politics' of social work , 2013 .
[138] Luca Fazzi. Social work, exclusionary populism and xenophobia in Italy , 2015 .
[139] C. Hanrahan. Challenging Anthropocentricism in Social Work Through Ethics and Spirituality: Lessons from Studies in Human-Animal Bonds , 2011 .
[140] C. Morley,et al. Rising wealth and income inequality in Australia and New Zealand: A radical social work critique and response , 2017 .
[141] P. Ramsden. Learning to lead in higher education , 1991 .
[142] William A. Anthony,et al. Recovery from mental illness: The guiding vision of the mental health service system in the 1990s. , 1993 .
[143] J. Nicholas. The American Nightmare , 2006 .
[144] M. Reisch. Social Work Education and the Neo-Liberal Challenge: The US Response to Increasing Global Inequality , 2013 .
[145] U. Flick,et al. Aging in precarious times: Exploring the role of gender in shaping views on aging , 2016, Journal of women & aging.
[146] K. Healy. Social Work Theories in Context , 2014 .
[147] R. Sands,et al. Postmodern Feminist Theory and Social Work , 1992 .
[148] K. Bell. Protecting public housing tenants in Australia from forced eviction: The fundamental importance of the human right to adequate housing and home , 2013 .
[149] Sue Green,et al. Building Indigenous Australian Social Work , 2008 .
[150] R. V. Krieken,et al. The `Stolen Generations' and Cultural Genocide , 1999 .
[151] D. Cameron,et al. The mental health social worker as a transitional participant: actively listening to ‘voices’ and getting into the recovery position , 2013 .
[152] P. Deegan. Recovery as a journey of the heart. , 1996 .
[153] R. Smith. Perspectives in sociology , 1991 .
[154] Cyndy Baskin. Aboriginal World Views as Challenges and Possibilities in Social Work Education , 2019, Critical Social Work.
[155] Daniel W. Surry,et al. The co-dependent relationship of technology and communities , 2016, Br. J. Educ. Technol..
[156] Liz Beddoe,et al. Creating Continuous Conversation: Social Workers and Learning Organizations , 2009 .
[157] Fiona Sim,et al. Embracing complexity. , 2015, Public health.
[158] Linda T. Darling. A History of Social Justice and Political Power in the Middle East: The Circle of Justice From Mesopotamia to Globalization , 2012 .
[159] Mary Langan,et al. Radical Social Work Today , 1989 .
[160] J. Mckinnon. Exploring the Nexus Between Social Work and the Environment , 2008 .
[161] Sarah Banks. Ethics and Values in Social Work , 1995 .
[162] H. Fabrega. On the Postmodernist Critique and Reformation of Psychiatry , 2008 .
[163] Christine Lynn Norton,et al. Social work and the environment: An ecosocial approach , 2012 .
[164] D. Brazier. Mindfulness reconsidered , 2013 .
[165] Susie Latham. The global rise of islamophobia: Whose side is social work on? , 2016 .
[166] J. Shankar,et al. Support Needs of Family Caregivers of People who Experience Mental Illness and the Role of Mental Health Services , 2007 .
[167] I. Ferguson. The New Social Work Radicalism: Results and Prospects , 2016 .
[168] R. Sawyer. Durkheim's Dilemma: Toward a Sociology of Emergence* , 2002 .
[169] R. Phillips. How ‘Empowerment’ May Miss Its Mark: Gender Equality Policies and How They are Understood in Women’s NGOs , 2015 .
[170] Bob Lonne,et al. A comparison of systems and outcomes for safeguarding children in Australia and Norway , 2012 .
[171] W. Nichol. Medicine and the labour movement in New South Wales, 1788-1850. , 1985, Labour history.
[172] D. Baines. ‘If You Could Change One Thing’: Social Service Workers and Restructuring , 2006 .
[173] N. Hurt. Disciplining through Depression: An Analysis of Contemporary Discourse on Women and Depression , 2007 .
[174] M. Alston,et al. The Big Dry , 2008 .
[175] J. Hirst. Keeping colonial history colonial: The Hartz thesis revisited∗ , 1984 .
[176] M. Heinsch. Getting down to earth: Finding a place for nature in social work practice , 2012 .
[177] C. Morley,et al. The challenges, triumphs and learning from participating in an Australian social work students' activist group , 2016 .
[178] F. Campbell. Ableism as transformative practice , 2014 .
[179] J. Irvine,et al. ‘Providing a Link with the Real World’: Learning from the Student Experience of Service User and Carer Involvement in Social Work Education , 2015 .
[180] C. Noble. Green Social Work – the Next Frontier for Action , 2016 .
[181] R. Robertson,et al. Discourses of Globalization , 1998 .
[182] P. Kam. Back to the ‘social’ of social work: Reviving the social work profession’s contribution to the promotion of social justice , 2014 .
[183] P. Beresford,et al. Service Users, Social Work Education and Knowledge for Social Work Practice , 2012 .
[184] D. Rudman. Embodying positive aging and neoliberal rationality: Talking about the aging body within narratives of retirement. , 2015 .
[185] S. Fullagar,et al. Rethinking gender, risk and depression in Australian mental health policy , 2002 .
[186] Henry A. Giroux. When Hope is Subversive , 2004 .
[187] A. Bailey. Privilege: Expanding on Marilyn Frye's 'Oppression' , 1998 .
[188] R. Egan,et al. Trust, Power and Safety in the Social Work Supervisory Relationship: Results from Australian Research , 2017 .
[189] M. Gray,et al. There are no Answers, Only Choices: Teaching Ethical Decision Making in Social Work , 2007 .
[190] J. Wuest. Feminist Grounded Theory: An Exploration of the Congruency and Tensions between Two Traditions in Knowledge Discovery , 1995 .
[191] S. Steingard. Critical Psychiatry , 2019, Springer International Publishing.
[192] Stephen A. Webb. Social Work in a Risk Society , 2006 .
[193] Alison Kafer. Un/Safe Disclosures: Scenes of Disability and Trauma , 2016 .
[194] Y. Mao. Trying to do justice to the concept of justice in Confucian ethics , 1997 .
[195] J. Niemi,et al. Promoting equality , 2019, Human Rights Law and Evidence-Based Policy.
[196] P. Chambers. The case for critical social gerontology in social work education and older women1 , 2004 .
[197] B. Applebaum. Comforting Discomfort as Complicity: White Fragility and the Pursuit of Invulnerability , 2017, Hypatia.
[198] Henry A. Giroux. "Something's Missing": Cultural Studies, Neoliberalism, and the Politics of Educated Hope , 2001 .
[199] Joyce E. Canaan. Developing a Pedagogy of Critical Hope. , 2005 .
[200] Laura Hudson. A Species of Thought: Bare Life and Animal Being , 2011 .
[201] C. Johns. Depending on the intent and emphasis of the supervisor, clinical supervision can be a different experience. , 2001, Journal of nursing management.
[202] Dorothy Van Soest. Confronting Our Fears and Finding Hope in Difficult Times: Social Work as a Force for Social Justice , 2012 .
[203] E. Oriel. Whom Would Animals Designate as “ Persons ” ? On Avoiding Anthropocentrism and Including Others , 2014 .
[204] Erinn Cunniff Gilson,et al. Vulnerability, Ignorance, and Oppression , 2011, Hypatia.
[205] M. Reisch. Defining Social Justice in a Socially Unjust World , 2002 .
[206] Andrew M. Thompson,et al. ‘Swimming to shore’: co-constructing supervision with a thinking-aloud process , 2015 .
[207] Hugh Mclaughlin. What's in a Name: ‘Client’, ‘Patient’, ‘Customer’, ‘Consumer’, ‘Expert by Experience’, ‘Service User’—What's Next? , 2009 .
[208] Kate Morris,et al. A Marriage Made in Hell: Early Intervention Meets Child Protection , 2014 .
[209] L. Dominelli. Feminist Social Work Theory and Practice , 2002 .
[210] Fabian Kessl. Critical reflexivity, social work, and the emerging European post-welfare states , 2009 .
[211] Tracey M. Holley,et al. Dialogue and Challenge: Involving Service Users and Carers in Small Group Learning with Social Work and Nursing Students , 2012 .
[212] P. Beresford. Radical social work and service users: a crucial connection , 2011 .
[213] L. Dominelli. Deprofessionalizing Social Work: Anti-Oppressive Practice, Competencies and Postmodernism , 1996 .
[214] Amy B. Rossiter. Discourse Analysis in Critical Social Work: From Apology to Question , 2019, Critical Social Work.
[215] M. Bhatia,et al. Perspectives on Women's Studies from India: Strengths, struggles and implications for programs in the U.S. , 2013 .
[216] B. Meekums. Embodied narratives in becoming a counselling trainer: an autoethnographic study , 2008 .
[217] M. Barnes,et al. Taking Over the Asylum , 2001, Macmillan Education UK.
[218] Anne C. Deepak. Globalization, power and resistance: Postcolonial and transnational feminist perspectives for social work practice , 2012 .
[219] P. Garrett. Questioning Tales of ‘Ordinary Magic’: ‘Resilience’ and Neo-Liberal Reasoning , 2016 .
[220] Lisa Cosgrove. When Labels Mask Oppression: Implications for Teaching Psychiatric Taxonomy to Mental Health Counselors , 2005 .