The Community and the Social Worker |
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Pagina 50
You probably already have an intuitive sense of status differences for individuals
with different occupations , such as physicians , school teachers , car assembly
line workers , bus drivers , and sanitation workers . Fortunately , the United States
...
You probably already have an intuitive sense of status differences for individuals
with different occupations , such as physicians , school teachers , car assembly
line workers , bus drivers , and sanitation workers . Fortunately , the United States
...
Pagina 95
Social workers define helping networks as household members ( family ) ,
neighbors , kinship groups , friends , co - workers , voluntary associations , and
formal human service organizations ( Warren , 1981 , p . 7 ) . Warren classifies
these ...
Social workers define helping networks as household members ( family ) ,
neighbors , kinship groups , friends , co - workers , voluntary associations , and
formal human service organizations ( Warren , 1981 , p . 7 ) . Warren classifies
these ...
Pagina 119
CHAPTER 10 The Community Economic System Social workers need to have at
least an elementary understanding of how a community ' s economic system
works — how the production , distribution , and consumption of goods and
services ...
CHAPTER 10 The Community Economic System Social workers need to have at
least an elementary understanding of how a community ' s economic system
works — how the production , distribution , and consumption of goods and
services ...
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Sommario
CONTENTS | 1 |
UNDERSTANDING COMMUNITIES | 28 |
Class and RaceEthnicity | 49 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
activities agencies American areas bars building centers central cities Chapter citizens competence concept County culture decision described Detroit developed economic effective efforts environment especially ethnic examine example Federal forces formal functions ghetto groups homes housing human identify important increase individuals influence institutions integration interaction interest involved issues larger Latinos leaders levels living major membership metropolitan Michigan minority move munity needs neighborhood neighbors offices opportunities organizational organizations Park participation patterns percent persons perspective planning political population positive Press problems professional programs racial Read relationships residential residents rural says serve social society sources status structure subsystems suburban suburbs suggests tion types understanding units urban values voluntary associations Warren welfare women workers