Description
Book SynopsisFocusing on research representing different types of European welfare states, including the Scandinavian and the Continental, this collection provides new insights about current welfare professions.
Trade Review"The book offers a timely and thought-provoking analysis of social welfare professions in transition across Europe. Highly recommended." Professor Hannele Forsberg, School of Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Tampere, Finland
Table of ContentsPreface ~ Björn Blom, Lars Evertsson & Marek Perlinski; European social and caring professions in transition ~ Björn Blom, Lars Evertsson & Marek Perlinski; Part 1. Knowledge, reflection and identity in the social and caring welfare professions; The impact of education on professional identity ~ Kåre Heggen & Lars Inge Terum; The Construction of Professional Identity in Social Work; Experience, Analytical Reflection and Time ~ Linda Bell, Maria Appel Nissen & Jorunn Vindegg; Professional supervision and professional autonomy ~ Synnöve Karvinen-Niinikoski, Liz Beddoe, Gillian Ruch & Ming-sum Tsui Part 2. Control, regulation and management; Reconfiguring Professional Autonomy? The case of social work in the UK ~ John Chandler, Elisabeth Berg, Marion Ellison & Jim Barry; Auditing and Accountability ~ Anders Hanberger, Lena Lindgren & Lennart Nygren; State regulation of the social work profession: an example from Poland ~ Kazimiera Wódz & Krystyna Faliszek; Part 3. Collaboration, conflict and competition; Professional boundary crossing and inter-professional knowledge development ~ Ilse Julkunen & Elisabeth Willumsen; The formation of a profession: The case of physiotherapy in Norway ~ Eline Thornquist & Hildur Kalman; The professional development of social work in Poland after 1989 ~ Sabina Pawlas-Czyz, Lars Evertsson & Marek Perlinski; Professional dilemmas of defining a problem: The case of addiction treatment ~ Joakim Isaksson & Daniel Törnqvist; Challenges of municipal community work ~ Witold Mandrysz, Marek Perlinski & Lars Evertsson; Part 4. Assessment, negotiation and decision-making; On the unnoticed aspects of professional practice ~ Rasmus Antoft, Kjeld Høgsbro, Maria Appel Nissen & Søren Peter Olesen; Can complexity in welfare professionals’ work be handled with standardised professional knowledge? ~ Lars Evertsson, Björn Blom, Marek Perlinski & Devin Rexvid; Who is viewed as a client by social workers and general practitioners? ~ Devin Rexvid; Activation work as professional practice: complexities and professional boundaries at the street level of employment policy implementation ~ Urban Nothdurfter & Søren Peter Olesen; Social and caring professions in European welfare states: trends and challenges ~ Marek Perlinski, Björn Blom & Lars Evertsson;