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Books > Social sciences > Sociology, social studies > Social work > General
An unflinching expose of how the family, juvenile, and criminal
justice systems monetize the communities they purport to serve and
trap them in crushing poverty Injustice, Inc. exposes the ways in
which justice systems exploit America's history of racial and
economic inequality to generate revenue on a massive scale. With
searing legal analysis, Daniel L. Hatcher uncovers how courts,
prosecutors, police, probation departments, and detention
facilities are abandoning ethics to churn vulnerable children and
adults into unconstitutional factory-like operations. Hatcher
reveals stark details of revenue schemes and reflects on the
systemic racialized harm of the injustice enterprise. He details
how these corporatized institutions enter contracts to make money
removing children from their homes, extort fines and fees,
collaborate with debt collectors, seize property, incentivize
arrests and evictions, enforce unpaid child labor, maximize
occupancy in detention and "treatment" centers, and more.
Injustice, Inc. underscores the need to unravel these predatory
operations, which have escaped public scrutiny for too long.
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which
commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out
and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and
impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes
high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using
print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in
1961.
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Fermented Liquors
- a Treatise on Brewing, Distilling, Rectifying, and Manufacturing of Sugars, Wines, Spirits, and All Known Liquors, Including Cider and Vinegar. Also, Hundreds of Valuable Directions in Medicine, Metallurgy, Pyrotechny, and the Arts...
(Hardcover)
Lewis 1805-1876 Feuchtwanger
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R834
Discovery Miles 8 340
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Currently there is an enduring and changing meaning of social work
in a world where new crises are being confronted and new
opportunities are arriving in the evolving context of social work
and the related disciplines. There is a question on how to manage
the transformation of social work both productively and creatively
during this global shift. Practitioners and educators can
experience a tragic disorientation when confronted by the diversity
and depth of these crises endured and can face doubts about their
role in social work throughout all these changes and difficult
situations. Alternatives to this disorientation, a comfort with
uncertainty, and a capability to take risks need to urgently be
developed on a professional and personal level for success in the
evolving field. Through historical lens and a review of policies
and value-based approaches, the recontextualization of social work
can be explored. Practical and Political Approaches to
Recontextualizing Social Work explores practical and political ways
in which social work practice has been reconstructed. Chapters
identify this recontextualization of social work and how it is
changing, adapting, and transforming the profession along with
providing the potential implications for the profession. This book
grants insight on the reconstruction of social work on the personal
and interpersonal level ("case" work) and also on those intending
to impact social work on the local/global environment level in all
dimensions: politically, economically, socially, and ecologically.
In addition, the book includes a shift from the present short-term
and micro/personal view to a future and much broader and
encompassing perspective and practice vision. This book is
essential for social workers, practitioners, policymakers,
government officials, researchers, academicians, and students who
want to learn more about the recontextualizing of modern social
work in a shifting global environment.
Social work education has the potential to be transformative,
consciousness raising, and to produce social change while inspiring
hope in students for the creation of more just systems. An
understanding of oppression, its diverse manifestations, and its
differential impact on vulnerable individuals and groups is
essential to contemporary social work education. What then is the
best manner in which to prepare educators for the immensely
important, complex, and multidimensional role as teacher of social
work? Most social work instructors learn to teach through trial and
error, bringing their own style, experiences, and preferences to
the endeavour rather than having a formal program of education and
instruction on how to best educate and instruct. This book
addresses the complex and uncertain field of social work education,
gathering together thirty experienced professors and practitioners
who teach in BSW, MSW, and PhD programs. Together, the contributors
create a framework for social work educators to reflect on how they
teach, why they teach in specific ways, and what works best for
teaching in the discipline of social work.
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