![]() ![]() this volume features contributions that: provide a conceptual clarification of many different terms that are used for describing deprived communities and offer a systematic literature review on community processes and effects on well-being in underdeveloped communities map different fields of social work involvement in deprived communities with concrete practice examples and, stress why social work as a profession needs support and how it can be empowered to improve its capacities in deprived communities. The journal focuses on the Clinical Therapy, Management Supervision and Research in the field of Social Work. Trauma-informed care is a way of providing services by which social workers recognize the prevalence of early adversity in the lives of clients, view presenting problems as symptoms of maladaptive coping, and understand how early trauma shapes a client's fundamental beliefs about the world and affects his or her. Fox OriginalPaper 22 November 2023 Newer Directions for Parallel Process in Social Work Supervision Eric S. Deprived communities, used in this book to mean slums, ghettos, favelas, and low-income, remote, underserved, vulnerable, impoverished, underdeveloped, disadvantaged, or less-favoured communities, exist worldwide and are conceptualized under different terms and concepts. Social workers frequently encounter clients with a history of trauma. Showing 1-50 of 2,181 articles Clinical Social Work with Families Affected by Brain Injuries: A Case Example Jeffrey McCrossin Original Paper 27 November 2023 The Integration of Somatic-Based Strategies into Couples Therapy Deborah J. This contributed volume offers a holistic understanding of social work practice in deprived communities through its thematization of understanding deprived communities globally, the development of competencies for social work practice in and with deprived communities, social work education as a community development tool, and the empowerment of social workers in deprived communities. Contributors to the volume are from different backgrounds and trainings, and write on such topics as: the vicious cycle of white centrality being Black in a world of whiteness undoing internalized white supremacy intersectionality and the contradictions of a white, Jewish identity becoming an antiracist leader and building an antiracist clinical practice. ![]() Being intentional about naming, deconstructing, and dismantling whiteness is a precursor to responding effectively to the racial reckoning of our society and improving race relationships, addressing systemic bias, and moving toward the creation of a more racially just world. An up-front, close, and fresh examination of the impact of whiteness and how it contributes to our troubled race relationships, this book posits that whiteness is a pervasive ideology that is rarely overtly identified or examined, although it has profound effects on race relationships in therapy and beyond. This article provides a review of the research that has informed the proposed changes to the DSM-5 conceptualization of personality psychopathology with a focus. ![]() The author addresses compelling ethical issues concerning (1) social workers’ use of digital technology to communicate with clients in relatively new ways, and (2) whether social workers’ use of digital technology alters the fundamental nature of the therapeutic relationship and clinicians’ ability to provide clients with a truly therapeutic environment.A comprehensive collection on the topic of whiteness from writers in the field of mental health and activism. The principal purpose of this article is to identify pertinent ethical and ethically-related risk-management issues that clinical social workers need to consider if they contemplate using this technology to assist people in need. Social work in the United States is a large, diverse profession of 600 000 practitioners, approximately half of whom are employed in health. The advent of this technology has produced a wide range of ethical challenges related to social workers’ application of traditional social work ethics concepts: client informed consent client privacy and confidentiality boundaries and dual relationships conflicts of interest practitioner competence records and documentation and collegial relationships. Increasing numbers of contemporary practitioners are using video counseling, email chat, social networking websites, text messaging, smartphone apps, avatar-based websites, self-guided web-based interventions, and other technology to provide clinical services to clients, some of whom they may never meet in person. Clinical social workers’ use of digital and other technology to provide distance counseling services is proliferating. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |