Sustaining Social Work: Between Power and Powerlessness
By (Author) Robbie Duschinsky
By (author) Sue Lampitt
By (author) Susan Bell
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Red Globe Press
21st April 2016
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
361.32
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
343g
Social work is a profession under strain, and practitioners report finding the role increasingly challenging. What can sustain social work in these times How can social workers sustain themselves in the role How can they derive confidence and meaning from what they do In addressing these questions, Sustaining Social Work is a source of understanding and support for professionals struggling with the tensions of practice. Accessible and engaging , it explores the fallout that results from social workers experiencing these tensions, including feelings of powerlessness, responsibility, optimism and cynicism. Drawing on ideas from social theory and the social sciences, it puts forward a model of sustainable social work that will help practitioners not just cope but flourish even in the context of ongoing crises. An enlightening, uplifting read in a difficult and uncertain time for the profession, Sustaining Social Work addresses the challenge of finding sustenance and consolation within day-to-day practice, enriching it beyond the short-term.
Robbie Duschinsky is University Lecturer in Social Sciences in the Primary Care Unit of the School of Clinical Medicine, Cambridge University. Until recently he was Research Lead and Reader in the Department of Social Work & Communities, Northumbria University. Sue Lampitt is Principal Lecturer in Social Work at Northumbria University, and programme lead for the BSc (Hons) Social Work. Susan Bell is Director of Social Work Programmes at Northumbria University.