1. In Search of 'British' Social Work: Identity, History and Entanglement, Malcolm Payne and Steven Shardlow 2. Social Work in England, Malcolm Payne and Steven Shardlow 3. Social Work in Late-Modern Ireland, Fred Powell, National University of Ireland, Cork and Harry Ferguson, University College, Dublin. 4. Social Work in Northern Ireland, Jim Campbell, Queen's University, Belfast and Mary McColgan, University of Ulster, Derry. 5. Social Work in Scotland: After Devolution, Lorraine Waterhouse, University of Edinburgh and Janice McGhee, University of Edinburgh6. Social Work in Wales, Mark Drakeford, University of Wales, Cardiff and Charlotte Williams, University of Wales, Bangor 7. Guernsey: Social Work on a Small Island, John Wolfe, Deputy Director, Children Board, Channel Islands. 8. Social Work in the British Isles: Continuities and Differentiations, Malcolm Payne and Steven Shardlow. Appendix: About the British Isles. Bibliography. Index
Malcolm Payne is Professor and Head of Department of Applied Community Studies at the Manchester Metropolitan University and has previously been the United Kingdom's representative on the Board of the International Association of Schools of Social Work. Steven Shardlow is Professor of Social Work at the University of Salford and is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Social Work. He has represented the United Kingdom on the European Association of Schools of Social Work.
The best recommendation I can give for this book is that three
colleagues have already borrowed it in the short time it has been
on my desk! This text is very easy to read and sets in context
political climate, social history, legal aspects, policy and
procedure and issues of discrimination. This book serves it's
purpose well, and it will be interesting to see how social work in
Britain develops as national identity continues to grow.
*Journal of Practice Teaching*
The focus and main value of this text in the comparison of how
history, culture and national identity affect the provision of
social care and social work practice in the different countries...
The book is clearly written.
*Community Care*
This is an excellent source book which brings together the legal,
administrative, political and professional aspects of social work
across the region. It does so very well, particularly through the
manner in which it exposes and explains the differences in systems
between these (largely) English speaking neighbours... The editors
have done a good job of bringing together writers who provide a
wide and relevant range of material, clearly and fluently written.
This is not in the words of the author of one of the chapters, a
book of `dumbing-down-blandness' (p. 156) but a coherent collection
of essays on the state of the art in social work.
*Child and Family Social Work*
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