معرفی کتاب «CARE, COMMUNITY AND CITIZENSHIP: RESEARCH AND PRACTICE IN A CHANGING POLICY CONTEXT; ED. BY SUSAN BALLOCH» نوشتهٔ Susan Balloch (editor); Michael Hill (editor)، منتشرشده توسط نشر Bristol University Press در سال 2007. این کتاب در 9 صفحه، فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
This collection focuses on the relationship between social care, community and citizenship, linking them in a way relevant to both policy and practice. It explores key concepts, policies, issues and relationships and draws on contrasting illustrations from England and Scotland. The authors examine the ethics of care exploring the theoretical and moral complexities for both those receiving and those delivering care. The book also incorporates practice-based chapters on anti-social behaviour, domestic violence, community capacity to care, black and minority ethnic care, volunteering, befriending and home care and provides international comparisons and perspectives with chapters from Sweden, Germany and Japan.|This collection focuses on the relationship between social care, community and citizenship, linking them in a way relevant to both policy and practice. It explores key concepts, policies, issues and relationships and draws on contrasting illustrations from England and Scotland. The authors examine the ethics of care exploring the theoretical and moral complexities for both those receiving and those delivering care. The book also incorporates practice-based chapters on anti-social behaviour, domestic violence, community capacity to care, black and minority ethnic care, volunteering, befriending and home care and provides international comparisons and perspectives with chapters from Sweden, Germany and Japan. There has already been much discussion and critique of the New Public Management, and the impact of auditing and inspection on professional work in schools, hospitals, local government and the police. This study, by a qualitative sociologist, uses interpretive methods to examine this new form of regulation from the inside. Based on interviews with inspectors, quality assurance managers, and auditors, as well as with professionals struggling with red tape, it offers a critical and insightful account of organisational change. The author includes vivid accounts of how quality assurance procedures and systems work in practice, conveying a sense of what is practically involved in the work of counting, measuring and managing quality, and the everyday frustrations of professionals dealing with ever-increasing amounts of paper work and red tape. This book should be essential reading for anyone concerned about the rise of this new bureaucracy and the contemporary state of the professions. It is intended to support courses on quality assurance and the New Public Management in public administration and management. It also provides an accessible introduction for students in socio-legal studies, sociology and social policy about the effects of neo-liberalism on public sector work Care, community and citizenship Contents List of tables and figures Acknowledgements Notes on contributors Introduction Part One: Care, community and citizenship in the delivery of welfare The role of communities in care Care, citizenship and community in the UK Care, citizenship and community in Scotland Part Two: Ethics, care and community Participation, citizenship and a feminist ethic of care Ethical dilemmas of front-line regeneration workers Citizenship and care for people with dementia Part Three: Bridging the gaps: a practice-based approach Rough justice, enforcement or support Survivors of domestic violence, community and care Promoting choice and control Community care development Neighbourhood Care Scheme Challenging stigma and combating social exclusion through befriending Paid care workers in the community Part Four: Comparative perspectives The care of older people in Sweden From old to new forms of civic engagement The social care system for older people in Japan Conclusion Index
This collection focuses on the relationship between social care, community and citizenship, linking them in a way relevant to both policy and practice. It explores key concepts, policies, issues and relationships and draws on contrasting illustrations from England and Scotland. The authors examine the ethics of care exploring the theoretical and moral complexities for both those receiving and those delivering care. The book also incorporates practice-based chapters on anti-social behaviour, domestic violence, community capacity to care, black and minority ethnic care, volunteering, befriending and home care and provides international comparisons and perspectives with chapters from Sweden, Germany and Japan.
This edited collection focuses on the relationship between social care, communities and citizenship. While there is extensive research within each of these fields, until now there is a dearth of dialogue between them: this book provides a link in a way that is relevant to both policy and practice Edited By Susan Balloch And Michael Hill. Includes Bibliographical References And Index.