Professional Identity and Social Work

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Actual Control Roles
affect theory
Category=JHBA
Category=JHBL
Category=JKSN
Child Protection Social Work
Community Payback Order
Contemporary Societies
Criminal Justice Social Work
education
Elizabeth Harlow
Emily Keddell
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Frame Social Workers
Fran Wiles
Front Line Social Workers
GSCC
health
Health Social Work
identity construction in social care
Institutional Logics Perspective
Inter-professional Collaboration
Inter-professional Partnerships
interprofessional practice
Jadwiga Leigh
Jem Price
Julia Emprechtinger
Julia Wheeler
jurisdiction
Liz Beddoe
Low Affective Commitment
Mark Erickson
Mark Smith
Martin Kettle
materiality in professions
Maura Daly
Melissa Hardesty
Mike Dent
Narrative Identity Work
NQSWs
organisation
organisational sociology
Peter Voll
police
practice
practitioner
practitioner self-concept
Professional Development
Professional Identity
professionalism
professionals
Residential Childcare
self-concept
Social Work
Social Work Identities
Social Work Research
Social Work's Professional Identity
Social Work’s Professional Identity
Stewart Collins
Student Social Workers
Tony Stanley
Torben Elgaard Jensen
Vice Versa
vocational socialisation
workplace culture
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138234420
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How are identities formed among social workers, many of whom perform complex, challenging and ambiguous public sector functions on a regular basis? Why does identity come to matter for professional social work? This book, the first of its kind in the field, examines professional identity in relation to social work by asking how practitioners think of themselves as a "social worker", a professional self-concept often entangled in a range of relations, beliefs, values and experiences.

Bringing together the perspectives of an internationally renowned group of specialists, the collection addresses a range of issues associated with professional identity construction and "being professional" in the context of a rapidly changing inter-professional environment. It introduces new concepts to social work, including materiality, enactment, performance, affect, entanglement, capital and worth, to consider the vexed issues surrounding matters of professional identity in social work.

This will be an essential guide to all those keen to debate the challenges and possibilities confronting contemporary social work through the lens of professional identity, whether they are students, educators, practitioners, researchers, managers, policy-makers or associated professionals. It will also appeal to those interested in social theory, organisational sociology and leadership as well as anyone working in related fields of health and education.

Stephen A. Webb is Professor of Social Work at Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland. Previous to this he was Professor of Human Sciences and Director of the Institute for Social Inclusion and Well-being, University of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia and Professorial Research Fellow at the University of Sussex, UK.