Bültmann & Gerriets
Professional Ideologies and Preferences in Social Work
A Global Study
von John Dixon, John Gal, Idit Weiss
Verlag: Praeger
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-86569-315-9
Erschienen am 30.12.2003
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 240 mm [H] x 161 mm [B] x 18 mm [T]
Gewicht: 539 Gramm
Umfang: 246 Seiten

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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

IDIT WEISS is a Lecturer in the Bob Shapell School of Social Work at Tel Aviv University.
JOHN GAL is a Senior Lecturer in the Paul Baerwald School of Social Work at the Hebrew University.
JOHN DIXON is Professor of International Social Work at the University of Plymouth.



Preface
Research Design and Methodology by Idit Weiss, John Gal, and John Dixon
Australia by Bill Healy and David Cox
Brazil by Maria do Carmo Brant de Carvalho, Mariangela Belfiori Wanderley, and Patricia Teixeira Mendes
Canada by Hugh Shewell
Germany by David Kramer, Rolf Landwehr, and Bernd Kolleck
Hong Kong by C. W. Lam and Cecilia L. W. Chan
Hungary by Agnes Darvas and Gábor Hegyesi
Israel by Idit Weiss and John Gal
United Kingdom by Johanna Woodcock
United States by Charles Zastrow and Tim Reutebuch
Zimbabwe by Edwin Kaseke and Perpetua Gumbo
Professional Ideologies and Preferences: A Global and Comparative Perspective by John Dixon, Idit Weiss, and John Gal
Index
About the Contributors



Weiss, Gal, Dixon, and their contributors provide the first large-scale cross-national and cross-cultural examination of the views and the perceptions of social workers through this analysis of graduating social worker students on the threshold of their careers in social work. They identify and analyze the graduating social work students' attitudes towards the sources of social distress, the preferred ways to deal with social problems, the goals of social work, and their professional preferences with regard to client groups, types of professional activity, and place of work.
Since first being practiced more than a century ago, social work has become an international profession and is today an integral part of the social services in many different countries. However, as Weiss, Gal, Dixon, and their contributors make clear, there is a distinct lack of ideological consensus over the goals, tasks, desired technologies, major client groups, the preferred sector in which to operate, and a variety of other issues. Throughout its history, social work has undergone a constant process of change; nonetheless, despite the existence of a common professional core, social work is quite clearly socially constructed and takes very different forms in the various national settings throughout the world.
This book provides the first large-scale cross-national and cross-cultural examination of the views and perceptions of social workers through an analysis of graduating social worker students at the threshold of their careers in social work. The country chapters identify and analyze the graduating social work students' attitudes towards the sources of social distress, the preferred ways to deal with social problems, the goals of social work, and their professional preferences with regard to client groups, types of professional activity, and place of work. Experts on social work provide analyses on Australia, Brazil, Canada, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Israel, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Zimbabawe.


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