Description
The Routledge Handbook of Critical Social Work brings together the world’s leading scholars in the field to provide a cutting-edge overview of classic and current research and future trends in the subject.
Comprised of 48 chapters divided into six parts:
- Historical, social, and political influences
- Mapping the theoretical and conceptual terrain
- Methods of engagement and modes of analysis
- Critical contexts for practice and policy
- Professional education and socialisation
- Future challenges, directions, and transformations
it provides an authoritative guide to theory and method, and the primary debates of today in social work from a critical perspective.
This handbook is a major reference work and the first book to comprehensively map the wide-ranging territory of critical social work. It does so by addressing its conceptual developments, its methodological advances, its value-based front-line practice and as an influence on the policy field. By offering a definitive survey of current academic knowledge as it relates to professional practice, it provides the first comprehensive, up-to-date, definitive work of reference while at the same time identifying emerging, innovative and cutting-edge areas.
The book includes several articles related to children's care and protection, including:
- Chapter Twenty-Five Parents organizing a grassroots movement to reform child welfare by David Tobis
- Chapter Thirty-Five Adoption, child rescue, maltreatment and poverty by June Thoburn and Brigid Featherstone
- Chapter Thirty-Six Critical debates in child protection: the production of risk in changing times by Emily Keddell and Tony Stanley