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Human behavior theory and social work practice with marginalized oppressed populations / Roberta R. Greene

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publication details: New York : Routledge, c 2019.Edition: 1stDescription: xviii, 151 p.: illustrations; 23 cmISBN:
  • 9781138593909
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23 361.32 GRE
Contents:
1 The RESM: A Culturally Sensitive Model of Social Work Practice; 2 Narrative Theory, the Culturally Sensitive RESM Interview, and the Helping Process; 3 Risk and Resilience Theory: An Outcome Approach; 4 RESM Assessment and Intervention: Ecological and Systems Theory; 5 Social Work and Social Justice: Groups, Organizations, and Social Movements; 6 A Presenting Problem, a Family, and a Marginalized Community: Applying the RESM; 7 The RESM: An African American Client With Dementia and His Caregivers; 8 Educational Resilience, School Stressors, and the RESM of School Social Work Practice; 9 Resettling as a Forced Migrant: Applying the RESM; 10 Improving Police-Community Relations: Creating a Third Space for Cultural Inclusion; 11 Chronic Stress in U.S. Indigenous Communities: The RESM and the Relational-Self Approach; 12 Grand Narratives: Building Community and Global Resilience
Summary: Human behavior theory and social work practice with marginalized oppressed populations addresses what social workers can do to combat the increasingly complex social concerns that face the procession, and explores how to incorporate the celebration of diversity and the protection of human rights into social work curricula and the helping process. The authors combine human behavior theories with a narrative, postmodern practice methodology that deals with both the client's or constituencies' presenting problem and equity issues, and, as a result, the book is both theoretical and applied. Two major integrating themes throughout are at the forefront of the book - the celebration of diversity and the equality of human rights. The goal is to strengthen diversity and human rights components of the social work curriculum and to provide more practice guidelines for cross-cultural practice
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
General Books General Books CUTN Central Library Social Sciences Non-fiction 361.32 GRE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 47086

1 The RESM: A Culturally Sensitive Model of Social Work Practice;
2 Narrative Theory, the Culturally Sensitive RESM Interview, and the Helping Process;
3 Risk and Resilience Theory: An Outcome Approach;
4 RESM Assessment and Intervention: Ecological and Systems Theory;
5 Social Work and Social Justice: Groups, Organizations, and Social Movements;
6 A Presenting Problem, a Family, and a Marginalized Community: Applying the RESM;
7 The RESM: An African American Client With Dementia and His Caregivers;
8 Educational Resilience, School Stressors, and the RESM of School Social Work Practice;
9 Resettling as a Forced Migrant: Applying the RESM;
10 Improving Police-Community Relations: Creating a Third Space for Cultural Inclusion;
11 Chronic Stress in U.S. Indigenous Communities: The RESM and the Relational-Self Approach;
12 Grand Narratives: Building Community and Global Resilience

Human behavior theory and social work practice with marginalized oppressed populations addresses what social workers can do to combat the increasingly complex social concerns that face the procession, and explores how to incorporate the celebration of diversity and the protection of human rights into social work curricula and the helping process. The authors combine human behavior theories with a narrative, postmodern practice methodology that deals with both the client's or constituencies' presenting problem and equity issues, and, as a result, the book is both theoretical and applied. Two major integrating themes throughout are at the forefront of the book - the celebration of diversity and the equality of human rights. The goal is to strengthen diversity and human rights components of the social work curriculum and to provide more practice guidelines for cross-cultural practice

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