Strategies for Work With Involuntary Clients

Strategies for Work With Involuntary Clients
Author: Ronald H. Rooney
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 552
Release: 2009-01-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780231519519

Involuntary clients are required to see a professional, such as juveniles on probation, or are pressured to seek help, such as alcoholics threatened with the desertion of a spouse. For close to two decades, Strategies for Work with Involuntary Clients has led in its honest analysis of the involuntary transaction, suggesting the kind of effective legal and ethical intervention that can lead to more cooperative encounters, successful contracts, and less burnout on both sides of the treatment relationship. For this second edition, Ronald H. Rooney has invited experts to address recent theories and provide new information on the best practices for specific populations and settings. He also adds practical examples and questions to each chapter to better facilitate the involvement of students and readers, plus a section on motivational interviewing.

Working with Involuntary Clients

Working with Involuntary Clients
Author: Chris Trotter
Publisher: SAGE
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2006-04-27
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781412918800

'Working with Involuntary Clients' aims to be a practical guide to working with both clients and their families. The book offers a new problem-solving model which places emphasis on clarifying roles, promoting pro-social values, and more.

Involuntary Clients in Social Work Practice

Involuntary Clients in Social Work Practice
Author: Andre Ivanoff
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 239
Release: 2024-11-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1040280447

First published in 1994. While not setting out to write a book about social policy, Ivanoff, Blythe and Tripodi, seasoned and well-known contributors to the spirited debate on the proper relationship of research and practice methods in direct services, have, nonetheless, delivered much useful commentary on how those direct services resources ought best be deployed. This book is to a clear call for commitment of skilled professional resources for those citizens whose serious and often multiple problems have already deeply involved them in public sector services.

Case Scenarios for Teaching and Learning Social Work Practice

Case Scenarios for Teaching and Learning Social Work Practice
Author: Shirley M. Haulotte
Publisher:
Total Pages: 146
Release: 2001
Genre: Social Science
ISBN:

Suitable for practice courses at the BSW or MSW levels, the 40 carefully crafted vignettes in this collection are drawn from actual cases and combine practitioner expertise, rigorous scholarship, and current social work knowledge. A wide range of settings, client systems, and problems are presented, as are suggestions for assessing the information provided and formulating an intervention plan. The first three units are organized chronologically, proceeding from beginning to middle and ending phases of practice with clients. Unit four includes cases focusing on special issues-exceptions to the rule-in social work practice, such as conflicting values and ethics, working with diverse populations, and working with involuntary clients. Readers interested in focusing on particular groups and kinds of issues will also find a helpful index of cases organized by issue and client population.

Solution-oriented Social Work Practice

Solution-oriented Social Work Practice
Author: Gilbert J. Greene
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2011
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0195162625

Too often in practice, there is a tendency to pathologize clients, requiring a diagnosis as part of the helping relationship. Suppose, however, that most of the client problems that social workers encounter have more to do with the vagaries of life and not with what clients are doing wrong. This powerful idea is the philosophy behind the strengths-based approaches to social work. This groundbreaking practice handbook takes this concept one step further, combining the different strengths-based approaches into an overarching model of solution-oriented social work for greater impact. The strengths perspective emphasizes client strengths, goal-setting, and a shared definition of positive outcome. Solution-focused therapy approaches ongoing problems when they have temporarily abated, amplifying exceptions as solutions. This natural but rarely explored pairing is one component in the challenging and effective practice framework presented here by the authors, two seasoned practitioners with over 50 years of combined experience. By integrating the most useful aspects of the major approaches, a step-by-step plan for action emerges. With this text in hand, you will: - Integrate elements from the strengths perspective, solution-focused therapy, narrative therapy, and the strategic therapy of the Mental Research Institute (the MRI approach) into an effective and eclectic framework - Build and practice your skills using case examples, transcripts, and practical advice - Equip yourself with the tools you need to emphasize clients' strengths - Challenge the diagnosis-first medical model of behavioral health care - Collaborate with clients to get past thinking (first-order change), and more to acting "outside the box" (second-order change) - Learn to work with a wide variety of clients, including individuals, groups, and families; involuntary clients; clients with severe mental illness; and clients in crisis For any student or practitioner interested in working with clients towards collaborative and empowering change, this is the essential text.

Task-centered Practice

Task-centered Practice
Author: William James Reid
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 328
Release: 1977
Genre: Family social work
ISBN: 9780231040723

Based on the papers of the Conference on applications of task-centered treatment, held at the University of Chicago, 1975.

Oxford Bibliographies

Oxford Bibliographies
Author: Edward J. Mullen
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release:
Genre: AIDS (Disease) in adolescence
ISBN: 9780195389678

Offers peer-reviewed annotated bibliographies on social work as a discipline grounded in social theory and the improvement of peoples' lives. Bibliographies are browseable by subject area and keyword searchable. Contains a "My OBO" function that allows users to create personalized bibliographies of individual citations from different bibliographies.

Handbook of Social Work with Groups

Handbook of Social Work with Groups
Author: Charles D. Garvin
Publisher: Guilford Publications
Total Pages: 542
Release: 2017-02-13
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1462532284

This comprehensive handbook presents major theories of social work practice with groups and explores contemporary issues in designing and evaluating interventions. Students and practitioners gain an in-depth view of the many ways that groups are used to help people address personal problems, cope with disabilities, strengthen families and communities, resolve conflict, achieve social change, and more. Offering authoritative coverage of theoretical, practical, and methodological concerns--coupled with a clear focus on empowerment and diversity--this is an outstanding text for group work and direct practice courses.