The Community and the Social WorkerThis text is intended to contribute to an understanding of human behavior in the social environment by providing social work students with an introduction to American communities. The primary focus is on local communities of place. Attention is also given to the communities of interest and identification that are intertwined with geographic communities. Ecological systems and social systems perspectives serve as conceptual and practical frameworks for examining the multiple communities in which people have membership, social identity, and social interaction. This edition begins with an exposition of the societal context of communities. American society is recognized as part of a global community and then examined as a social system, a community of communities, a multicultural society, and a civil society. The book emphasizes the way that discrimination, economic deprivation, and oppression affect populations at risk and demonstrates the role communities play in the pursuit of individual and collective social and economic justice. |
Hva folk mener - Skriv en omtale
Vi har ikke funnet noen omtaler på noen av de vanlige stedene.
Innhold
The Societal Context of Communities 124 | 1 |
American Society as a Welfare State | 30 |
Defining Communities | 49 |
Opphavsrett | |
19 andre deler vises ikke
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
activities African Americans agencies American society areas associations become benefits centers central changes Chapter cities Court create crime culture disabilities discrimination districts diversity economic employment especially established ethnic example families federal functions funding goals groups housing human identified immigrants important income increase individuals institutions integration interaction interest involved issues justice levels live major mental minority move movement munity needs neighborhoods opportunities organizations parents participation patterns percent persons perspective planning policies political poor population poverty practice Press problems programs racial regard relationships religious residential residents response rural schools segregation social class social welfare social workers society structure suburban tion types United urban usually values viewed women York