A massive restructuring of health care in virtually all the
wealthy nations of the West has offloaded services and costs from
governmental responsibility into home care services and onto
families -- a burden borne primarily by women. This restructuring
has profoundly altered not only the practice of social work but
also its representation in language and theory. As this volume
demonstrates, many of the consequences social workers must face are
made more difficult by the dominance of a market discourse that
excludes a social justice framework.
The authors aim not to prescribe specific guidelines for
practice but "to challenge current arrangements and explanations"
in order to open the discourse and generate alternatives so that
people receiving care might have fuller and more satisfying lives.
Written by social work theorists and specialists from the U.S.,
Canada, and New Zealand, the chapters focus on topics of long-term
care as they affect vulnerable groups -- women in particular -- as
they age. Subjects include constructing community support, aging
and caregiving in culturally diverse families, changing
demographics of widowhood, and the new millennium's challenges for
social work on aging and disability.
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