Handbook of Social Work and Social Development in Africa

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African Development Bank
African welfare systems
Category=JKSN
children
Civil Society
Colonial Administration
community-based interventions
decolonising social services
developmental
Developmental Social Work
District Social Welfare Office
education
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
gender inequality interventions
HDI
Humanitarian Aid
IASSW
ICF International
mental health policy Africa
National Action Plan
National Social Protection Strategies
nations
NGOs
Northern Uganda
population
post-conflict humanitarian social work
practice
profession
protection
qualitative research Africa
Social Protection
Social Welfare Officer
Social Work
Social Work Education
Social Work Practice
SOS
SOS Child Village
South Sudan
Structural Social Work
UN
united
Violates
vulnerable
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472468512
  • Weight: 960g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Nov 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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All recent books on international social work mention Africa only briefly and few engage with the broader field of development studies. This book focuses solely on the unique African context engaging with issues relating to social work and development more broadly thus enabling a deeper examination and more complex and nuanced picture to emerge. Unlike most academic works, this book highlights multiple practitioner voices, with authors or co-authors that have recently been or are currently practising social workers. As an edited book, it draws from both academic research as well as lived practice experience, supported by strong theoretical positioning and guidance in introductory chapters, drawing on African literature, wherever possible. Looking at case-studies from Lesotho, Botswana, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, Namibia, Uganda, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Rwanda, Zambia and Tanzania and covering established areas of practice such as child protection; working with older people; working with people with disabilities; mental health; and mainstream services targeting women as well as emerging areas of developmental social work practice, such as humanitarian assistance in post-conflict situations; work with immigrants and refugees; and the training of community-based workers, this book takes a future-oriented perspective that aims to move beyond well-worn critiques to envision constructive and sustainable futures for social work and social development in Africa from a critical perspective.

Mel Gray is Professor and Chair of Social Work at the University of Newcastle, Australia, and previously the University KwaZulu-Natal in Durban, South Africa, where she was born. She edited the first book on Developmental Social Work in South Africa (David Philip 1998) and has long had an interest in the responsive of Western social work to non-Western contexts. She also published Social Work: A beginner’s text (1996), an introduction to the profession for social work students in South Africa.