Social Work and Human Rights: A Foundation for Policy and Practice
Edited by Elisabeth Reichert
eISBN: 9780231518086
2003 (304 pages 6 illus.)
Available PDF Downloads
Complete Book Download
(pages 1-302)
Table of Contents
(pages 5-6)
List of Abbreviations
(pages 7-8)
Introduction: Social Work Perspectives on Human Rights
(pages 9-16)
1. Human Rights in the Twenty-first Century: Creating a New Paradigm for Social Work
(pages 17-31)
2. Human Rights in Social Work Practice: An Invisible Part of the Social Work Curriculum?
(pages 32-59)
3. Global Distributive Justice as a Human Right:Implications for the Creation of a Human Rights Culture
(pages 60-91)
4. Cultural Relativism and Community Activism
(pages 92-112)
5. Development, Social Development, and Human Rights
(pages 113-137)
6. Using Economic Human Rights in the Movement to End Poverty: The Kensington Welfare Rights Union and thePoor People’s Economic Human Rights Campaign
(pages 138-153)
7. Economic and Social Rights: The Neglected Human Rights
(pages 154-177)
8. Human Rights and Women: A Work in Progress
(pages 178-203)
9. Human Rights Violations Against Female Offenders and Inmates
(pages 204-230)
10. Children’s Rights as a Template for Social Work Practice
(pages 231-254)
11. Globalization, Democratization, and Human Rights: Human-Made Disasters and a Call for Universal Social Justice
(pages 255-273)
12. Law and Social Work: Not-So-Odd Bedfellows in Promoting Human Rights
(pages 274-292)
Contributors
(pages 293-296)
Index
(pages 297-302)
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Social Work and Human Rights: A Foundation for Policy and Practice
By using human rights as a guidepost, social workers can help create social welfare policies that better serve societal needs. However, in applying human rights to contemporary situations, social workers often encounter challenges that require thinking outside the box. Bringing together provocative essays from a diverse range of authors, Elisabeth Reichert demonstrates how approaching social work from a human rights perspective can profoundly affect legislation, resource management, and enforcement of policies. Topics include the reconciliation of cultural relativism with universal human rights; the debate over whether human rights truly promote economic and social development or simply allow economically developed societies to exploit underdeveloped countries; the role of gender in the practice of human rights; the tendency to promote political and civil rights over economic and social rights; and the surprising connection between the social work and legal professions.
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Table of Contents
Social Work and Human Rights: A Foundation for Policy and Practice
Author(s):
Reichert, Elisabeth, ed.
Keyword(s):
SW09; SW11; SW04; SW02; SW07; CSWO
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