European Social Work After 1989

European Social Work After 1989

East-West Exchanges Between Universal Principles and Cultural Sensitivity

Lorenz, Walter; Matousek, Oldrich; Havrdova, Zuzana

Springer Nature Switzerland AG

09/2021

211

Mole

Inglês

9783030458133

15 a 20 dias

355

Descrição não disponível.
Chapter 1: 1989 as a Key Moment in the Development of International Dimensions of Social Work.- Chapter 2: Beginning Anew - Social Work Education in the Czech Republic after the Velvet Revolution.- Chapter 3: Nurturing Opportunities to Advance the European Values in Specific Social and Health Service Contexts - Examples from the Czech Republic.- Chapter 4: After the Divorce - Social Work in Slovakia since the Peaceful Separation of Czechoslovakia.- Chapter 5: Lithuanian Social Work's Claim to Professional Autonomy vs. Authoritarianism in Popular and Political Culture.- Chapter 6: Rebuilding Romanian Social Work Education after 1989 - Benefits and Constraints from European Collaboration.- Chapter 7: Social Work between Civil Society and the State - Lessons for and from Hungary in a European Context.- Chapter 8: Social Work Education Programmes in Russia in the Light of European Collaboration.- Chapter 9: Nordic-Baltic Cooperation in Social Work Researcher Education: A Finnish Perspective on the Impact on Scientific, Historical and Linguistic Similarities and Differences.- Chapter 10: European Social Work: Lost in Translations, United in Diversity or Based on Common and Critical Understandings? Lessons from a Multilingual University in South Tirol.- Chapter 11: Intra-National Similarities and Differences in Social Work and their Significance for Developing European Dimensions of Research and Education - The Case of Belgium.- Chapter 12: Social Work, Political Conflict and European Society: Reflections from Northern Ireland.- Chapter 13: Conclusions: Cultural Diversity and Core Principles and Values in Social Work.
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Post-communist welfare;European social work;ERASMUS;International social work research;Neoliberalism;Welfare path dependency;Civil society movements;Social work and political conflict;Social work and sectarianism;Social work and nationalism;History of social work;Social service privatization;Managerialism;Velvet Revolution;social work education;social work practice;social work and eastern Europe;social work and western Europe;social welfare;social work values