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Provides empirical insights based on research on youth and
vulnerability and frontline practices showing theoretical,
political as well as practical implications. Uses case-studies from
Portugal, Greece, Poland, Czech Republic, Great Britain, Sweden,
Finland and Denmark. Provides a distinct social work perspective on
youth and welfare encounters.
Current debates around participation and marginalization dominate
the agenda of many European political forums. There is an
increasing concern about the stability of social cohesion and a
growing number of particular groups of people who are regarded as
being at risk of being socially excluded or marginalized. This
volume goes beyond the surface of public discussions to look at the
central role played by welfare services in European societies in
either strengthening or hindering participatory citizenship and
democracy. In current discussions welfare services - understood in
a broad sense - are centrally positioned: there are high
expectations that welfare services can hinder marginalization and
enable participation. Yet marginalization is, in most cases, rooted
in the deeper structures of society, with economy, participation
and involvement dependent on political or highly personal factors,
which are beyond the scope of welfare services. This groundbreaking
volume posits that participation and marginalization are 'twin'
concepts, expressing opposing sides of one and the same processes
faced by individuals and communities. It will be essential reading
for social workers, sociologists and policy-makers throughout
Europe.
Current debates around participation and marginalization dominate
the agenda of many European political forums. There is an
increasing concern about the stability of social cohesion and a
growing number of particular groups of people who are regarded as
being at risk of being socially excluded or marginalized. This
volume goes beyond the surface of public discussions to look at the
central role played by welfare services in European societies in
either strengthening or hindering participatory citizenship and
democracy. In current discussions welfare services - understood in
a broad sense - are centrally positioned: there are high
expectations that welfare services can hinder marginalization and
enable participation. Yet marginalization is, in most cases, rooted
in the deeper structures of society, with economy, participation
and involvement dependent on political or highly personal factors,
which are beyond the scope of welfare services. This groundbreaking
volume posits that participation and marginalization are 'twin'
concepts, expressing opposing sides of one and the same processes
faced by individuals and communities. It will be essential reading
for social workers, sociologists and policy-makers throughout
Europe.
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