The Community and the Social WorkerF.E. Peacock Publishers, 2001 - 389 pagine This text is intended to contribute to an understanding of human behavior in the social environment by providing social work students with an introduction to American communities. The primary focus is on local communities of place. Attention is also given to the communities of interest and identification that are intertwined with geographic communities. Ecological systems and social systems perspectives serve as conceptual and practical frameworks for examining the multiple communities in which people have membership, social identity, and social interaction. This edition begins with an exposition of the societal context of communities. American society is recognized as part of a global community and then examined as a social system, a community of communities, a multicultural society, and a civil society. The book emphasizes the way that discrimination, economic deprivation, and oppression affect populations at risk and demonstrates the role communities play in the pursuit of individual and collective social and economic justice. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 60
Pagina 78
... patterns or relationships at the biotic level are not considered to be deliberate or rationally determined , but are viewed as impersonal and symbiotic . Such patterns can be observed in the struc- ture of communities as they develop ...
... patterns or relationships at the biotic level are not considered to be deliberate or rationally determined , but are viewed as impersonal and symbiotic . Such patterns can be observed in the struc- ture of communities as they develop ...
Pagina 169
... patterns of im- migrants during the 1990s . For example , Levine ( 1990 ) has noted that in New York City immigrants from the Caribbean , Latin America , Asia , and Africa have " revived bleak sections of the Bronx and Brooklyn and ...
... patterns of im- migrants during the 1990s . For example , Levine ( 1990 ) has noted that in New York City immigrants from the Caribbean , Latin America , Asia , and Africa have " revived bleak sections of the Bronx and Brooklyn and ...
Pagina 171
... patterns of new immigrants is found in Brighton Beach and Manhattan Beach in Brooklyn , New York ( Yard- ley , 1998 ) ... patterns of members of the gay community . In the past the major pattern has been one of gay men and lesbians ...
... patterns of new immigrants is found in Brighton Beach and Manhattan Beach in Brooklyn , New York ( Yard- ley , 1998 ) ... patterns of members of the gay community . In the past the major pattern has been one of gay men and lesbians ...
Sommario
The Societal Context of Communities | 1 |
American Society as a Welfare State | 30 |
Defining Communities | 49 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
African Americans agencies American society Asian Asian Americans associations borhoods Census centers central cities Chapter charter schools cial color communities of place controversy Court crime culture disabilities discrimination diversity edge cities employment empowerment especially ethnic minority example families federal functions funding ghetto goals Hispanic homeless housing human service identified immigrants income individuals inner-city involved Latino lesbian levels lifestyle major ment mental health metropolitan areas minority groups mobility munity Native Americans needs neigh neighborhoods networks nity organizations parents participation patterns percent persons perspective policies political system poor population poverty problems programs public schools racial religious residential residents rural school districts segregation sexual harassment social class social interaction social services social welfare social workers subsystems suburban communities tion U.S. Supreme Court urban voluntary associations vouchers Wall Street Journal women workplace York zone