Carrying a Banner for Psychiatric Social Work

Carrying a Banner for Psychiatric Social Work
Author: Maida Herman Solomon
Publisher: Regent Press
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2004
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781587900655

The career memoir of Maida herman (1891-1988) who worked to build a profession of psychiatric social work (later also clinical social work), whild supporting feminist goals, which moved mental health education and service into the modern period.

Psychiatric Social Work in Great Britain

Psychiatric Social Work in Great Britain
Author: Noel Timms
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2018-12-07
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0429764715

Originally published in 1964 Psychiatric Social Work looks at psychiatric social work as an established form of professional social work in Great Britain, as well as the mental health policy introduced at the time of the book’s publication. The book looks at how social workers in the 1960s were striving for professional status, and the interest that grew around their professional status during this period. The book examines changes and issues in their training and a general picture of those who qualified. It looks at the careers of a group of social workers and follows the developments in child guidance, mental hospitals, and the care of the mentally ill in the community. The contribution of social workers is discussed and their activities of the professional associations in training and professional development is examined. This book will act as an important historical look at the changes to social work.

Historical Research

Historical Research
Author: Elizabeth Ann Danto
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 175
Release: 2008-09-16
Genre: History
ISBN: 0195333063

What, exactly, was the Charity Organization Society? Was it a cluster of affluent women imposing their moral propriety on the poor in the early 20th Century? Or was it the first concerted effort to professionalize previously random, subjective allocations of benefits and entitlements? This book will help researchers explore systematically such fascinating questions and debates in social work and social welfare history.Mastering how to pose historical questions is as essential as finding the answers. This book, from its wide-ranging coverage of historiographic theory to detailed guidelines for conducting oral history and archival research, offers clear and practical research tools: how to design a study, select primary sources, understand the vocabulary of archives, determine useful secondary sources, and analyze them all. The book also features a guide to archives and special collections that details their holdings, access and locations, and research grants - essential knowledge for any researcher.The thrill of stumbling across unexplored data in the stacks of a library is notorious. Now, this clearly written pocket guide will help established scholars as well as doctoral students get the most out of historical data.

A New History of Social Work

A New History of Social Work
Author: John H. Pierson
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2021-09-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 0429656653

This book provides an overview of the main developments in social work over its 200-year history. From its beginnings in the early 19th century through to the present day, it recounts the efforts to create a fairer, socially just society through its work with individuals and families. Throughout, by focusing on individual cases as well as major ideas behind practice, this book invites the reader to step into the practitioner’s world as it unfolded. Providing a fresh, critical history of social work in Britain, the book covers the practical assistance for families and individuals in poverty in the 19th century; women’s social work with destitute mothers and children; social work’s response to war time needs; the development of specific domains of social work such as hospital social work, psychiatric social workers, moral welfare and children in care; tackling racism; and social work in a market society. The reader encounters the society that social workers and their users wrote about, thought about and sought to create. Covering critical points of dispute along with overarching visions that would take the profession – and society – forward, the book explores the ideologies, moral constructs and social forces that shaped everyday social work. A New History of Social Work will be of interest to all scholars and students of social work and will be particularly relevant for modules on introductions to social work and the foundations of social work.