When Social Services are Local

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1970s
1980s
A01=Morag McGrath
A01=Roger Hadley
Ancillary Worker
Area Officer
Area Team
area team organisation
Author_Morag McGrath
Author_Roger Hadley
Category=JKSN
community social work
community-based social services reform
community-centred
community-oriented
Contact Study
Core Team
DCO
Department of Health and Social Security
DHSS.
District Nurses
Domiciliary Services
Domiciliary Workers
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
fieldwork practice UK
Home Helps
Informal Referrals
multi-agency collaboration
Outer Team
Patch Leaders
Patch Systems
Patch Teams
Patch Work
patch-based social services
People's Welfare Committee
People’s Welfare Committee
personal social services
preventive welfare approaches
public welfare
Scan
social services
Social Services Area Team
Social Services Department
Social Services Team
social work
Social Work Assistant
Social Worker
Wakefield MDC
West Yorkshire

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032054612
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In the early 1980s in Britain the organisation of the personal social services had come under increasingly critical scrutiny. The establishment of large social services departments following re-organisation in the early 1970s had led, some argued, to the emergence of services which all too often were over-centralised, fragmented and crisis-oriented in their approach.

In attempts to break out of this reactive system and to fashion services which were more coherent and preventive, a growing number of field teams within the departments had begun to adopt community-oriented patterns of organisation. Originally published in 1984, this book based on an eighteen-month study of the area team at Normanton (Wakefield MDC), which incorporated social workers, ancillaries, and domiciliary staff in neighbourhood sub-teams, offered the first systematic account of the operation of this new approach. The authors examine how referrals and long-term work are handled, describe the management of the team, and consider the views of workers, users and the staff of other agencies. While giving a clear picture of the difficulties faced in adopting a community-centred approach the book provides convincing evidence of its potential to create more responsive and effective services based on better knowledge of the population served, easier access to the team, broader staff roles, and the active encouragement of local community initiatives.

The most comprehensive account of an area team so far published, this book would be essential reading for all those concerned to improve the performance of the personal social services at the time. It would be of particular importance to councillors, managers and planners, to social workers and other field staff in social services departments, and to teachers and students of social work.

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