DAVID HOWE

Social workers need to recognise the critical role that theory plays both in the way they make sense of what is going on and in the way they order their work. Such recognition clarifies practice for both the worker and the client.
This book provides a framework to help social workers develop an understanding of the theories which inescapably underpin their thoughts and actions.
David Howe identifies and explains the distinctive character of each of the major theories in social work. He describes, analyses and assesses social work in the psychoanalytic tradition, behavioural social work, systems theory, client-centred approaches, feminist social work and radical and Marxist practices. Through examples, the author demonstrates that different theories necessarily lead to very different practices.
The result is a stimulating guide to social work theory which will help social workers both to understand their practices and to practise in a disciplined and imaginative way.
1 The Consumer Reports
2 Making Sense
3 Sorting Out Social Work Theories
4 The World of Objects and Subjects
5 Order and Conflict in Society
6 A Taxonomy of Social Work Theories
7 The Fixers
8 The Psychoanalytic Tradition in Social Work
9 Behavioural Social Work
10 The Seekers After Meaning
11 Client-Centred Approaches
12 The Raisers of Consciousness
13 Radical Practice
14 The Revolutionaries
15 Marxist Social Work
16 Theories for Social Work and Theories of Social Work
David Howe, Lecturer in Social Work at the University of
East Anglia.
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