Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?

No === This article reports ways in which applicants to the Degree in Social Work see `social problems¿, their origins and possible solutions to them. What is demonstrated is that whilst applicants are concerned about a range of problems, those which could be broadly classified as `anti-social be...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gilligan, Philip A.
Language:en
Published: Oxford University Press 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/2721
id ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-2721
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-27212019-08-31T03:02:30Z Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions? Gilligan, Philip A. Social problems Radical social work Social work education Student's views No This article reports ways in which applicants to the Degree in Social Work see `social problems¿, their origins and possible solutions to them. What is demonstrated is that whilst applicants are concerned about a range of problems, those which could be broadly classified as `anti-social behaviours by individuals or groups¿ predominate, in contrast to those which could be defined as `aspects of the social structure which have an adverse impact on individuals or groups¿. Applicants are much more likely to suggest `individual¿ rather than `social¿ causes and are most likely to suggest `liberal/reformist¿ solutions. It is argued, in the context of frame analysis, that pre-existing views will usually impact strongly on how students respond to the knowledge and challenges offered during training. The article aims to place discussion within consideration of wider issues, particularly whether social work in Britain can maintain its historic commitment to social justice and prevent itself becoming an increasingly uncritical tool of the UK government¿s social authoritarianism. Finally, it seeks to raise questions about whether social work education can assist qualifying workers to develop and maintain resiliently radical approaches to practice, which are also effective in bringing positive change to vulnerable and disadvantaged people. 2009-05-29T09:35:47Z 2009-05-29T09:35:47Z 2007-06 Article final draft paper Gilligan, Philip A. (2007). Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions? British Journal of Social Work, Vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 735-760. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/2721 en http://bjsw.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/37/4/735 © 2007 Oxford University Press. Reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. Oxford University Press
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Social problems
Radical social work
Social work education
Student's views
spellingShingle Social problems
Radical social work
Social work education
Student's views
Gilligan, Philip A.
Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
description No === This article reports ways in which applicants to the Degree in Social Work see `social problems¿, their origins and possible solutions to them. What is demonstrated is that whilst applicants are concerned about a range of problems, those which could be broadly classified as `anti-social behaviours by individuals or groups¿ predominate, in contrast to those which could be defined as `aspects of the social structure which have an adverse impact on individuals or groups¿. Applicants are much more likely to suggest `individual¿ rather than `social¿ causes and are most likely to suggest `liberal/reformist¿ solutions. It is argued, in the context of frame analysis, that pre-existing views will usually impact strongly on how students respond to the knowledge and challenges offered during training. The article aims to place discussion within consideration of wider issues, particularly whether social work in Britain can maintain its historic commitment to social justice and prevent itself becoming an increasingly uncritical tool of the UK government¿s social authoritarianism. Finally, it seeks to raise questions about whether social work education can assist qualifying workers to develop and maintain resiliently radical approaches to practice, which are also effective in bringing positive change to vulnerable and disadvantaged people.
author Gilligan, Philip A.
author_facet Gilligan, Philip A.
author_sort Gilligan, Philip A.
title Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
title_short Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
title_full Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
title_fullStr Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
title_full_unstemmed Well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: How do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
title_sort well-motivated reformists or nascent radicals: how do applicants to the degree in social work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
publisher Oxford University Press
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/2721
work_keys_str_mv AT gilliganphilipa wellmotivatedreformistsornascentradicalshowdoapplicantstothedegreeinsocialworkseesocialproblemstheiroriginsandsolutions
_version_ 1719239385825673216