Search results for "Social Work"

showing 10 items of 343 documents

Improving child maltreatment detection systems: a large-scale case study involving health, social services, and school professionals.

2003

Abstract Objectives: The purpose of this 5-year study was to improve detection in two consecutive phases: (a) To close the gap between the number of identified cases and the actual number of cases of child abuse by increasing detection; and (b) To increase the possibility of a broader spectrum of detection. Method: The Balearic Islands (one of the Autonomous Communities of Spain, with 161,287 children under 18 years old) was selected as the study area. Phase 1: front-line professionals (181) from all the health and social services agencies were trained in detection. Phase 2, school professionals (251) from all schools in the territory were also trained. The independent factor was the interv…

Child abusemedicine.medical_specialtySocial WorkAdolescenteducationChild Health ServicesPoison controlSuicide preventionOccupational safety and healthCatchment Area HealthEnvironmental healthSurveys and QuestionnairesDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansMass ScreeningChild AbuseChildSchoolsSocial workbusiness.industryPublic healthMental healthPsychiatry and Mental healthChild protectionSpainFamily medicineCase-Control StudiesChild PreschoolPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthbusinessChild abuseneglect
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International development aid and young people's participation in societal development of the global south

2018

International development aid has in recent years sought to strengthen youths’ societal participation by cooperation between international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) and local youth associations. In this paper, we address and conceptualise some of the underlying causes that may enable and/or limit such efforts to support youth participation in the global south. We seek to contribute to the growing literature exploring the multiple scales of young people's political agency. A core argument proposed is that notions of generational relationality, as seen in the case of international development aid targeting youth, must include conceptions of power as a topological relation across …

Civil societyEconomic growthSociology and Political ScienceSocial Psychology05 social sciencesGeography Planning and Development0507 social and economic geographyGlobal South050906 social workPolitical scienceSocietal development0509 other social sciencesInternational development050703 geography
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Refugee Social Work Positioned Between Transnationalization, State Services and Volunteering: A Review from the German Context

2018

Social work has always been basically organized at the local and national levels. Nevertheless, in the face of globalization, social work has to be reconsidered far beyond national boundaries, because its clients’ social life worlds extend beyond local and state borders. This chapter analyzes the state of the art in the field of volunteering, refuge and social work and argues that due to its double mandate, social work could act as a bridge between state services and initiatives of the civil society and offer an insight into the ambiguities of cooperation between volunteering activities and professional social work using selected examples.

Civil societySocial workRefugee05 social sciences0507 social and economic geographyFace (sociological concept)Context (language use)Public administrationBridge (interpersonal)0506 political scienceGlobalizationPolitical science050602 political science & public administrationMandate050703 geography
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The Vocationalisation of University Programmes in France: its Consequences for Employability and Mobility

2011

France has a multi-track higher education system which includes four key components: Grandes Ecoles, short vocational training tracks, specialised higher education institutions (in social work, healthcare and the arts), and universities. Access to higher education is traditionally defined by the contrast between universities (which enrol all holders of the baccalaureat without any selection process) and the extremely selective Grandes Ecoles. The other tertiary courses are not directly accessible to all baccalaureat holders who wish to enrol because the number of study places is limited; applications to these tracks involve a selection process (based on educational records or a competitive …

ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSIONHigher educationSocial workbusiness.industryEmployabilityThe artsTest (assessment)Vocational educationHealth carePedagogyComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATIONSociologyAccess to Higher Educationbusiness
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The Cross-Level Moderation Effect of Resource-Providing Leadership on the Demands—Work Ability Relationship

2021

Employees in female-dominated sectors are exposed to high workloads, emotional job demands, and role ambiguity, and often have insufficient resources to deal with these demands. This imbalance causes strain, threatening employees’ work ability. The aim of this study was to examine whether resource-providing leadership at the workplace level buffers against the negative repercussions of these job demands on work ability. Employees (N = 2383) from 290 work groups across three countries (Germany, Finland, and Sweden) in female-dominated sectors were asked to complete questionnaires in this study. Employees rated their immediate supervisor’s resource-providing leadership and also self-reported …

ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSIONRWork Capacity Evaluationpsychosocial workplace factorspsychosocial workplace factors ; multilevel modeling ; workload ; role ambiguity ; emotional demandsemotional demandsrole ambiguityJob SatisfactionArticleworkloadLeadershipSurveys and QuestionnairesHumansMedicineFemaleWorkplacemultilevel modelingInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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Grief support provided to caregivers of palliative care patients in Spain

2006

Grief support for relatives of patients in palliative care is recognized as a fundamental practice within palliative medicine. The aim of this research was to determine the nature and extent of grief support programs offered to relatives of patients in palliative care in Spain. A postal survey was carried out among members of the Spanish Society of Palliative Care. The members' names were obtained through the Society's 2000 Directory, which lists 160 different teams, of which 50% answered a questionnaire made up of 34 questions, some open-ended and others multiple choice. Results show that 88.6% of the services include grief support, that mainly emotional and one-to-one care is provided (9…

Counselingmedicine.medical_specialtyPalliative careAttitude of Health Personnelmedia_common.quotation_subjectFamily supportRisk AssessmentBlame03 medical and health sciencesSocial support0302 clinical medicineNursing030502 gerontologySurveys and QuestionnairesIntervention (counseling)medicineHumansmedia_commonFamily HealthSocial workbusiness.industryPublic healthPalliative CareSocial SupportGeneral MedicineAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineCaregiversSpain030220 oncology & carcinogenesisGriefGrief0305 other medical sciencebusinessPalliative Medicine
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Everyday Discourses on Disability: A barrier to successful disability policy?

2006

Concerning the role of everyday discourses on disability in the realiza- tion of disability policy, this qualitative study focuses on the problematic meanings of disability and of being disabled in 45 fictional texts about a disabled woman and man (21/24) written by non-disabled graduate students and welfare professionals. The traditional individualising un- derstanding of disability was dominant in the discourses of the texts, especially in those about the disabled women which also repeated oth- ering discourses. The socio-environmental understanding was echoed as well, but mainly in the texts about the disabled men. I discuss the possible practical consequences of the polarised and gender…

Critical consciousnessGraduate studentsSocial workmedia_common.quotation_subjectGender studiesMedical model of disabilityPsychologySocial psychologyWelfaremedia_commonQualitative researchNordisk sosialt arbeid
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The self-narrative and acute psychosis

1995

The aim of this study was to apply the narrative approach in analyzing family therapy meetings in cases of acute psychosis. The self-narrative is essential in acute psychosis since it is either collapsed or not coherent enough. The results indicate that it is important to create concrete practices that produce stories concerning the patient in relation to others. The self-narrative must be re-authored by the patient even though it is socially constructed. This is achieved by creating multiple perspectives of self-narratives in so-called therapy meetings with the patient, family members, and staff members representing different professionals.

Cultural StudiesFamily therapyPsychosisPsychotherapistSocial PsychologySocial workSelfmedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.diseaseSocial constructionismClinical PsychologyPersonal identitymedicinePersonalityNarrativePsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonContemporary Family Therapy
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Conversations on contexts and meanings: On understanding therapeutic change from a contextual viewpoint

1990

Recent developments within family therapy theory, often referred to as the Post-Milan Movement, have once again stressed the therapeutic encounter'squality of conversation. When therapy is looked upon as conversation, attention is not only paid to the fact that most of what happens in a session is talking. Rather, a more fundamental stance towardshuman life as basically meaning- making is taken. This is one of the essential premises of the contextualist approach to the social sciences. When applied to human problems this approach claims that “symptoms” evolve when (1) a person gives meaning to and performs a social act within a context inappropriate to the socially shared meaning of that ac…

Cultural StudiesFamily therapySocial PsychologySocial workmedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)Session (web analytics)EpistemologyClinical PsychologyConversationMeaning (existential)PsychologySocial psychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonContemporary Family Therapy
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Dealing with negative connotations in family therapeutic treatment of an enmeshed family: A case study

1996

In psychotherapy the moments when negative connotations of diagnostic remarks become apparent are also the moments for change. To be able to use those moments for positive outcome calls for, according to this case study: 1) An inquiring approach and attitude to therapeutic work which translates to the challenging of basic hypotheses and the unambiguous meaning of diagnostic signs starting from the referral and continuing through the treatment process. 2) The integration of the nonverbal experiential technique with the verbal reflective approach, which can be conceptualized as a double description of the problem situation, and which allows reframing, or recontextualization. 3) A diagnostic c…

Cultural StudiesPsychotherapistSocial PsychologyReferralSocial workmedia_common.quotation_subjectCognitive reframingExperiential learningOutcome (game theory)Clinical PsychologyNonverbal communicationConversationMeaning (existential)PsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonContemporary Family Therapy
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