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1.
Socioecol Pract Res ; 4(2): 57-69, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35464237

ABSTRACT

Places-the meaningful locations of daily life-have been central to the wellbeing of humans since they first formed social groups, providing a stable base for individuals, families, and communities. In the United States and Canada, as elsewhere, place also plays a foundational role in the provision of critical social and health services and resources. Yet the globally destabilizing events of the COVID-19 pandemic have dramatically challenged the concept, experience, and meaning of place. Place-centered public health measures such as lockdowns and stay-at-home orders have disrupted and transformed homes, neighborhoods, workplaces, and schools. These measures stressed families and communities, particularly among marginalized groups, and made the delivery of vital resources and services more difficult. At the same time, the pandemic has stimulated a range of creative and resilient responses. Building from an overview of these effects and drawing conceptually on theories of people-place relationships, this paper argues for critical attention to reconsidering and re-envisioning prevailing assumptions about place-centric policies, services, and practices. Such reappraisal is vital to ensuring that, going forward, scholars, policymakers, and practitioners can effectively design and deliver services capable of maintaining social connections, safety, and wellbeing in contexts of uncertainty, inequality, and flux.

2.
Br J Soc Work ; 49(4): 963-982, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31308576

ABSTRACT

Despite calls for greater social work attention to the centrality of place in human life, the profession has yet to hone frameworks that fully capture the role of place in individual-collective identity and well-being. To move this agenda forward, this article draws on data from a series of focus groups to explore the placed experiences of women in Palestine. Analytically, it is informed by critical place inquiry, which emphasises the deeply interactional relationships between people and places, views place-centred practice and research as catalysts for active responses to the spatialised nature of power and injustice, and focuses centrally on the geographic and spatial dynamics of colonisation, and particularly settler colonialism, as key determinants of individual and collective well-being. Women's spatial narratives revolved around individual-collective identity and sovereignty, focusing in particular on three interdependent factors: freedom of movement; possession and dispossession; and continuity of place. Findings also illuminated spatial practices of resistance by which women defend and promote identity and sovereignty. We conclude with recommendations for more explicit, critically informed attention to place in social work practice, education and research.

3.
Res Soc Work Pract ; 28(3): 254-264, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30220827

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Early career faculty experiences and perspectives on transdisciplinary research are important yet understudied. METHODS: Assistant professors at 50 top-ranked social work programs completed an online survey assessing perspectives on the salience of transdisciplinary training in their field, obstacles to or negative impacts of transdisciplinary training, and current environments. Content analysis and descriptive statistics were used. RESULTS: A large majority of all participants (N » 118) believed that transdisciplinary research is important, that greater training is needed, and that they are relatively well prepared in related skill sets. They are expected to build cross-disciplinary collaborations, yet only a small minority believed that social work researchers are nationally recognized as important collaborators, or that they are prepared to navigate tensions on research teams. CONCLUSIONS: We offer a multilevel framework of structural and training supports needed to realize transdisciplinary research in social work with relevance to other disciplines.

4.
J Teach Soc Work ; 35(1-2): 131-150, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26005286

ABSTRACT

Research models that bridge disciplinary, theoretical, and methodological boundaries are increasingly common as funders and the public push for timely, effective, collaborative responses to pressing social and environmental problems. Although social work is inherently an integrative discipline, there is growing recognition of the need to better prepare emerging scholars for sophisticated transdisciplinary and translational research environments. This paper outlines a developmental, competency-oriented approach to enhancing the readiness of doctoral students and emerging scholars in social work and allied disciplines for transdisciplinary research, describes an array of pedagogical tools applicable in doctoral course work and other program elements, and urges coordinated attention to enhancing the field's transdisciplinary training capacity.

5.
Child Welfare ; 88(1): 101-26, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19653455

ABSTRACT

Calls for expanded use of tested child mental health interventions in child welfare practice add new urgency to the longstanding question of how to enhance parent engagement in child welfare services, where low and uneven levels of engagement are pervasive, and services to parents and children tend to be separated, leaving important opportunities for parent-child interventions underutilized. Tackling these issues requires both expanded understandings of what engagement entails and the incorporation into child welfare practice of systematic, research-based strategies for supporting parental involvement. Drawing on a review of factors that shape (and often confound) efforts to engage parents in child welfare, and on relevant research, this paper lays the initial foundation for such an approach by identifying and describing six core dimensions of engagement and related intervention strategies.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse/rehabilitation , Family/psychology , Parent-Child Relations , Professional-Family Relations , Social Work/methods , Adult , Case Management , Child , Child Abuse/psychology , Foster Home Care , Humans , United States
6.
Child Welfare ; 88(1): 189-212, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19653459

ABSTRACT

This paper, the second in a series of two guideline papers emerging from the 2007 Best Practices for Mental Health in Child Welfare Consensus Conference, provides an overview of the key issues related to parent support and youth empowerment in child welfare and presents consensus guidelines in these important areas. The paper also discusses some of the implications these guidelines have for the child welfare field.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse/rehabilitation , Foster Home Care , Parents , Self Efficacy , Social Support , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Humans , Parents/psychology , Patient Advocacy , Power, Psychological , Social Work/education , Social Work/methods , United States
7.
Child Welfare ; 87(6): 5-30, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19534351

ABSTRACT

This paper presents a practical framework for relational practice with birth families, organized around parental visitation. The approach was developed in the Birth Family-Foster Family Connections Project, a three-year collaborative research demonstration project between a large private agency and the Washington State Department of Child and Family Services. The overall goal of the Connections Project, which served young children from infancy to age 6, was to create supportive connections among birth families, foster families, children, and the child welfare system. Although engaging parents in child welfare services is a challenging task for social workers, the Connections Project resulted in strong parent-worker relationships, very high participation in weekly visitation by birth parents, and quite extensive contact between birth and foster families. The paper describes relational strategies used by Connections social workers before and during visits, with the goal of providing child welfare social workers with a practical and effective framework for engaging parents through this core child welfare service.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Foster Home Care , Parent-Child Relations , Benchmarking , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Pilot Projects , Program Development
8.
Am J Community Psychol ; 38(1-2): 125-39, 2006 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16794876

ABSTRACT

Interdisciplinary collaborations that aim to facilitate meaningful community outcomes require both the right mix of disciplinary knowledge and effective community participation, which together can deepen collective knowledge and the capacity to take action. This article explores three interdisciplinary design charrettes, intensive participatory workshops that addressed specific community problems and provided a context for integrating design and social science inquiry with local community knowledge. Evaluation data from the charrettes shed light on how students from the design and social science disciplines experienced the charrettes, and on their interactions with community members. Key advantages to this interdisciplinary, community-based collaboration included expanded knowledge derived from the use of multiple modes of inquiry, particularly the resulting visualization tools that helped community members understand local issues and envision novel solutions. Key drawbacks included difficulties in balancing the two disciplines, the tendency for social scientists to feel out of place on designers' turf, and the increased disciplinary and interpersonal conflicts arising from a more diverse pool of participants.


Subject(s)
Community Health Planning , Community Participation , Health Services Research , Interdisciplinary Communication , Problem Solving , Psychology, Social , Sociology , Cooperative Behavior , Education , Humans , Program Evaluation , Research Design , United States
9.
Child Welfare ; 85(1): 5-31, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16596825

ABSTRACT

Much of the available data on Asian American families who become involved with the child welfare system relies on global ethnic categories, such as the category Asian/Pacific Islander. To explore the diversity of experience that is hidden by such categories, this article analyzes two years of child maltreatment referrals for Asian and Pacific Island families in Washington state. The study findings show that considerable variation exists within the Asian and Pacific Islander population with regard to child protection referrals. Although Asian Americans as a whole were less likely to be referred to child protective services than other groups, the within group picture that these data capture is considerably more complex. Some Asian/Pacific Islander ethnic groups, particularly those which have experienced higher levels of social and economic stress, were more at risk of child welfare involvement than other groups. Such findings underscore the need for child welfare policies and practice that are sensitive to the considerable variability within the Asian/Pacific Islander community.


Subject(s)
Asian/psychology , Child Abuse/ethnology , Child Custody/statistics & numerical data , Family/ethnology , Referral and Consultation , Asian/statistics & numerical data , Child , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child, Preschool , Crime Victims/psychology , Crime Victims/statistics & numerical data , Culture , Emigration and Immigration , Female , Humans , Male , Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander/psychology , Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander/statistics & numerical data , Punishment , Self Disclosure , Washington
10.
Child Welfare ; 81(1): 58-86, 2002.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11893020

ABSTRACT

Despite growing awareness of the complex needs of legally free children in child welfare care, relatively little empirical investigation has been done of these children and their experiences. This article reports the results of a study of length of stay and predictors of permanency in a sample of 1,366 legally free children in state custody in Washington state. A Cox proportional-hazards event history model was developed to explore the effects of gender, race, and ethnicity, and age at initial placement, on the likelihood of achieving legalized adoption or guardianship. Results indicate that older children, boys, and African American children were all significantly less likely to achieve a permanent outcome than were Caucasian children. Hispanic children, in the other hand, were significantly more likely to achieve a permanent outcome. The implications of these findings for permanency planning practice and policy development are discussed.


Subject(s)
Adoption , Child Custody/statistics & numerical data , Foster Home Care , Social Control Policies , Adolescent , Adoption/ethnology , Child , Child, Preschool , Ethnicity , Female , Humans , Male , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Policy Making , Proportional Hazards Models , Time Factors , Washington
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