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British Journal of Social Work, 39(8) - 2009
- Safeguarding and system change: early perceptions of the implications for adult protection services of the English individual budgets pilots: a qualitative study.
- A qualitative examination of power between child welfare workers and parents.
- Social support use as a parental coping strategy: its impact on outcome of child and parenting problems: a six-month follow-up
British Journal of Social Work, 39(7) - 2009
- Social work with adults with disabilities: an international perspective.
- Use of residential care in Europe for children aged under three: some lessons from neurobiology.
- Effectiveness of welfare organizations: the contribution of leadership styles, staff cohesion, and worker employment.
- Speaking from the margins: a critical reflection on the 'spiritual-but-not-religious' discourse in social work.
- Accountability and countable: information management systems and the bureaucratization of social work.
- Social workers in community care practice: ideologies and interactions with older people.
- Training for change: early days of individual budgets and the implications for social work and care management practice: a qualitative study and the views of trainers.
- Communication, recognition and social work: aligning the ethical theories of Habermas and Honneth.
- Family intervention projects: a site of social work practice.
- Recent policy initiatives in early childhood and the challenges for the social work profession.
- Abuse of children in West Africa: implications for social work education and practice.
- The descriptive tyranny of the common assessment framework: technologies of categorization and professional practice in child welfare.
British Journal of Social Work, 39(6) - 2009
- Befriending excluded families in Tower Hamlets: the emotional labour of family support workers in cases of child protection and family support.
- Growth in the shadow of war: the case of social workers and nurses working in a shared war reality.
- But is it social work? Some reflections on mistaken identities.
- Working girls: abuse or choice in street-level sex work? A study of homeless women in Nottingham.
- What's in a name: 'client', 'patient', 'customer', 'consumer', 'expert by experience', 'service user': what's next?
- Language politics, linguistic capital and bilingual practitioners in social work.
- Community anti-poverty strategies: a conceptional framework for a critical discussion.
- 'Yesterday's men': the inspectors of the Royal Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, 1888-1968.
- Life after caring: the post-caring experiences of former carers.
- What are child-care social workers doing in relation to infant mental health? An exploration of professional ideologies and practice preferences within an inter-agency context.
British Journal of Social Work, 39(5) - 2009
- Choosing language: social service framing and social justice.
- Individual budgets: lessons from early users' experiences.
- The effect of crisis resolution and home treatment on assessments under the 1983 Mental Health Act: an increased workload for approved social workers.
- Expertise and experience: people with experiences of using services and carers' views of the Mental Capacity Act 2005.
- Questioning Habermasian social work: a note on some alternative
- Exploring the impact of parental drug/alcohol problems on children and parents in a Midlands county in 2005/06.
- Management, leadership and resources in children's homes: what influences outcomes in residential child-care settings.
- Working in human services: how do experiences and working conditions in child welfare social work compare?
- Negotiating foster-families: identification and desire.
British Journal of Social Work, 39(4) - 2009
- Tackling the digital divide.
- Social work and the changing face of the digital divide.
- The role of virtual communities of practice in supporting collaborative learning among social workers.
- Practitioner networks: professional learning in the 21st Century.
- Knowledge management in social work: types and processes of knowledge sharing in social service organizations.
- Attitudes of family and professional care-givers towards the use of GPS for tracking patients with dementia: an exploratory study.
- The informatization of welfare: older people and the role of digital services.
- Ageing and technology: a review of the research literature.
- Client satisfaction and outcome comparisons of online and face to face counselling methods.
- An exemplary scheme? An evaluation of the Integrated Children's System.
- A tale of two CAFs: the impact of the Electronic Common Assessment Framework.
British Journal of Social Work, 39(3) - 2009
- The order of chaos: exploring agency care managers' construction of social order within fragmented worlds of state social work.
- Emancipating and empowering de-valued skilled immigrants: what hope does anti-oppressive social work practice offer.
- Challenges for students working in a shared traumatic reality.
- Tensions in the delivery of social work services in rural and remote Scotland.
- A hindrance or a help? The contribution of inspection to the quality of care in homes for older people.
- Mental health, risk communication and data quality in the electronic age.
- Ways of enhancing hope among social workers working with adolescents in residential treatment centres.
- Identifying families with multiple problems: possible responses from child and family social work to current policy developments.
- Identifying families with multiple problems: perspectives of practitioners and managers in three nations.
- Developing inclusive health and social care policies for older LGBT citizens.
British Journal of Social Work, 39(2) - 2009
- Publishing voice: training social workers in policy practice.
- Tacking inequalities in health: a global challenge for social work.
- Some critical perspectives on social work and collectives.
- The outcomes research project: an exploration of customary practice in Australian health settings.
- Retaining novices to become expert child protection practitioners: creating career pathways in direct practice.
- Professional categorization, risk management and inter-agency communication in public inquiries into disastrous outcomes.
- Combining professional expertize and service user expertize: negotiating therapy for sexually abused children.
- Evidence-based practice in social work: lessons from judgment and decision-making theory.
- A review of the research on solution-focused therapy.
- In the name of love: partner abuse and violence in teenage relationships.
British Journal of Social Work, 39(1) - 2009
- Beyond 'vulnerability': an ecological model approach to conceptualizing risk of sexual violence against people with learning difficulties.
- Attachment and coping strategies in middle childhood children whose mothers have a mental health problem: implications for social work practice.
- Leading practice improvement in front line child protection.
- Post-adoption contact and openness in adoptive parents' minds: consequences for children's development.
- High thresholds and prevention in children's services: the impact of mothers' coping strategies on outcome of child and parenting problems - six month follow-up.
- Chronic child abuse: the characteristics and careers of children caught in the child protection system.
- Happy shopper? The problem with service users and carer participation.
- What (a) difference a degree makes: the evaluation of the new social work degree in England.
- (Re) shaping social work: an Australian case study.
- From care to fellowship and back: interpretative repertoires used by social welfare workers when describing their relationship with homeless women.
- Social work and the shift from 'welfare' to 'justice'.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(8) - 2008
- Evidence-based practice: an exploration of the effectiveness of voluntary sector services for victims of community violence.
- Collaboration between community advocates and academic researchers: scientific advocacy or political research.
- Diversity and progression among students starting social work qualifying programmes in England between 1995 and 1998: a quantitative study.
- Themes in family care-giving: implications for social work practice with older adults.
- Powers to detain under mental health legislation in England and the role of the Approved Social Worker: an analysis of patterns and trends under the 1983 Mental Health Act in six local authorities.
- Early intervention in the round: a great idea but...
- Parental substance misuse and child welfare: outcomes for children two years after referral.
- That's not my child anymore! Parental grief after acquired brain injury (ABI): incidence, nature and longevity.
- Child welfare and information and communication technology: today's challenge.
- Risk, uncertainty and public protection: assessment of young people who offend.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(7) - 2008
- Trust development: a discussion of three approaches and a proposed alternative.
- Young women, local authority care and selling sex: findings from research.
- ‘We don’t see her as a social worker’: a service user case study of the importance of the social worker’s relationship and humanity.
- Barriers to retaining and using professional knowledge in local authority social work practice with adults in the UK.
- Independence in old age: the route to social exclusion?
- Pride or prejudice? Gay men, lesbians and dementia.
- Complexity theory: developing new understandings of child protection in field settings and in residential child care.
- Child risk and parental resistance: can motivational interviewing improve the practice of child and family social workers in working with parental alcohol misuse?
- Unravelling emotional, behavioural and educational outcomes in a longitudinal study of children in foster-care.
- How important is prevention? High thresholds and outcomes for applicants refused by Children’s Services: a six-month follow-up.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(6) - 2008
- Critical commentary: social work ethics.
- Revisiting the knowledge base of social work: a framework for practice.
- Prevention and social exclusion: new understandings for policy and practice.
- Statutory social workers: stress, job satisfaction, coping, social support and individual differences.
- The authentic warmth dimension of professional childcare.
- 'There are wonderful social workers but it's a lottery': older people's views about social workers.
- Family matters: developments concerning the role of the nearest relative and social worker under mental health law in England and Wales.
- Towards a proportionist social work ethics: a Habermasian perspective.
- A theoretical model for the comprehensive assessment of parenting.
- Family-based short breaks ( respite) for disabled children: results from the Fourth National Survey.
- The epidemiology of out-of-home care for children and youth: a national cohort study.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(5) - 2008
- Building research capacity in Social Work: process and issues.
- The development of problem-solving knowledge for social care practice.
- Kinds and quality of social work research.
- Learning from experience: developing a research strategy for social work in the UK.
- Everything must go? The privatization of state social work.
- The enculturation experience of Roma refugees: a Canadian perspective.
- Getting to the heart of recovery: methods for studying recovery and their implications for evidence-based practice.
- The recruitment and retention of family foster-carers: an international and cross-cultural analysis.
- Parental alcohol misuse in complex families: the implications for engagement.
- Ethics and governance in social work research in the UK.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(4) - 2008
- From melting pot to multiculturalism: the impact of racial and ethnic diversity on social work and social justice in the USA.
- Making refugees: a historical discourse analysis of the construction of the "refugee" in US social work, 1900-1957.
- City welfare in the sway of eugenics: a Swiss case study.
- Engendering social work education under state socialism in Yugoslavia.
- Transatlantic transfers in social work: contributions of three pioneers.
- A tale of two reports: social work in Scotland from Social work and the community (1966) to Changing lives (2006).
- Humanitarian narrative: bodies and detail in late-Victorian social work.
- State social work: constructing the present from moments of the past.
- The present Finnish formation of child welfare and history.
- Paradigms and politics: understanding methods paradigms in an historical context: the case of social pedagogy.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(3) - 2008
- Calling social work.
- Liquid social work: welfare interventions as mobile practices.
- Practitioners’ documentation of assessment and care planning in social care: the opportunities for organizational learning.
- Accountability to welfare service users: challenges and responses of service providers.
- Preventing suicide: a neglected social work research agenda.
- Grounding constructions of carers: exploring the experiences of carers through a grounded approach.
- Black African children and the child protection system.
- Community intervention with Jewish Israeli mothers in times of terror.
- Preventive services for adolescents: exploring the process of change.
- Beyond assessment: social work intervention in family court enquiries.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(2) - 2008
- BJSW critical commentary: what works in probation offender management: evidence for a new direction?
- Using students' written feedback on 'race' issues to enhance self-regulated learning.
- 'Anti-oppressiveness': critical comments on a discourse and its context.
- Painting the prison 'red': construction and experiencing Aboriginal identities in prison.
- Identity development and grieving: the evolving processes for parentally bereaved women.
- Locus of control, coping and proto prevention in child and family care.
- Exploring potential 'extra-familial' child homicide assailants in the UK and estimating their homicide rate: perception of risk - the need for debate.
- How to be modern: New Labour's neoliberal modernity and the Change for Children programme.
- Changes in the form of knowledge in social work: from the 'social' to the 'informational'?
- Differential impacts of stressful life events and social support on the mental health of mainland Chinese immigrant and local youth in Hong Kong: a resilience perspective.
- Resilience across cultures.
British Journal of Social Work, 38(1) - 2008
- The case for a new 'case' management in services for people with learning disabilities.
- For the sake of their health: older service users' requirements for social care to facilitate access to social networks following hospital discharge.
- Understanding structural and communication barriers to ordinary family life for families with disabled children: a combined social work and social model of disability analysis.
- 'The tip of the ice berg': children's complaints and advocacy in Wales - an insider view from complaints officers.
- The ties that bind: support from birth families and substitute families for young people leaving care.
- 'Everyone started shouting': making connections between the process of family group conferences and family therapy practice.
- Viewing spirituality in social work through the lens of contemporary social theory.
- Human rights and gypsies and travellers: an exploration of the application of a human rights perspective to social work with a minority community in Britain.
- Social work practice to support survival strategies in sub-Saharan Africa.
- Risk, mental disorder and social work practice: a gendered landscape.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(8) - 2007
- ‘Race’, ethnicity and child welfare: a fine balancing act.
- Dual relationships: personal and professional boundaries in rural social work.
- Students with criminal convictions: policies and practices in social work education.
- Promoting compassionate concern in social work: reflections on ethics, biology and love.
- The use of lay assessors.
- In their own right: translating the policy of carer assessment into practice.
- Schizophrenia: the impact of parental illness on children.
- Giving voice to black children: an analysis of social agency.
- The missing assessment domain: personal, professional and organizational factors influencing professional judgements when identifying and referring child neglect.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(7) - 2007
- Regulation and risk in social work: the General Social Care Council and the Social Care Register in context.
- The cost of caring? Social workers in hospitals confront ongoing terrorism.
- Why are they leaving? Factors affecting intention to leave among social workers in child welfare.
- Gaining satisfaction? An exploration of foster-carers' attitudes to payment.
- Direct payments and disabled people in the UK: supply, demand and devolution.
- Disabled children's experience of permanency in the looked after system.
- Learning from the experiences of ethnic minorities accessing HIV services in Ireland.
- Helping older people in residential care remain full citizens.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(6) - 2007
- 'Lifeworld', 'system' and family group conferences: Habermans's contribution to discourse in child protection.
- Fostering children and young people on remand: care or control?
- Field supervisors' feelings and concerns at the termination of the supervisory relationship.
- 'Reading' in professional practice: how social work practice assessors access knowledge and information.
- Assessment frameworks: a critical reflection.
- The single assessment process in primary care: older people's accounts of the process.
- Consistencies and inconsistencies: mental health, compulsory treatment and community capacity building in England, Wales and Australia.
- Victimization of juveniles in out-of-home placement: juvenile correction facilities.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(5) - 2007
- Health, disability and social work: new directions in social work research.
- Social workers' understanding of autistic spectrum disorders: an exploratory investigation.
- Managing the care home closure process: care manager's experiences and views.
- Poverty in the eyes of the beholder: social workers compared to other middle-class professionals.
- Social work practice in conflict-ridden areas: cultural sensitivity is not enough.
- Anti-oppressive research in social work: a preliminary definition.
- Making 'ant-social behaviour': a fragment of the evolution of 'ASBO politics' in Britain.
- Practice frameworks: conceptual maps to guide interventions in child welfare.
- Reuniting children with their families: reconsidering the evidence on timing, contact and outcomes.
- Whose wishes and feelings? Children's autonomy and parental influence in family court enquiries.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(4) - 2007
- Well motivated reformists or nascent radicals: how do applicants to the Degree in Social Work see social problems, their origins and solutions?
- Who wants to be a social worker? Using routine published data to identify trends in the numbers of people applying for and completing social work programmes in England.
- How using marketing approach helps social work students to develop community projects successfully.
- Reflection as dialogue.
- Reflective practice in contemporary child-care social work: the role of containment.
- Filial therapy: helping children and new carers to form secure attachment relationships.
- The search for stability and permanence: modelling the pathways of long-stay looked after children.
- Children starting to be looked after by local authorities in England: an analysis of inter-authority variation and case-centred decision making.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(3) - 2007
- Managing the financial assets of older people: balancing independence and protection.
- Who decides now? Protecting and empowering vulnerable adults who loose the capacity to make decisions for themselves.
- An examination of the use of coercion by assertive outreach and community mental health teams in Northern Ireland.
- A critical examination of immigrant acculturation: toward an anti-oppressive social work model with immigrant adults in a pluralistic society.
- Violence across the lifespan: interconnections among forms of abuse as described by marginalized Canadian elders and their care-givers.
- Developing the NICE/SCIE guidelines for dementia care: the challenges of enhancing the evidence base for social and health care.
- Free personal care in Scotland: a narrative review.
- Discourses of inter-professionalism.
- Shaping the future of mental health policy and legislation in Northern Ireland: the impact of service users and professional social work discourses.
- Direct payments and social work practice: the significance of 'street-level bureaucracy' in determining eligibility.
- Increasing user choice or privatizing risk? The antinomies of personalization.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(2) - 2007
- Grading gems: appraising the quality of research for social work and social care.
- On systematic reviews in social work: observations from teaching, learning and assessment of law in social work education.
- Part of the problem or part of the solution? The role of care homes in tackling delayed hospital discharges.
- Depression in the profession: social workers' experiences and perceptions.
- Spiritual need and the core business of social work.
- Emotional intelligence, emotion and social work: context, characteristics, complications and contribution.
- Young mothers and care system: contextualizing risk and vulnerability.
- The regulation of out-of-home care.
- Including the socially excluded: the impact of government policy on vulnerable families and children in need.
British Journal of Social Work, 37(1) - 2007
- An unfinished reflexive journey: social work students’ reflection on their placement experiences.
- Reflexivity, its meanings and relevance for social work: a critical review of the literature.
- Community-based parenting programmes: an exploration of the interplay between environmental and organizational factors in a Webster Stratton project.
- Variations in registration on child protection registers.
- Older carers of adults with a learning disability confront the future: issues and preferences in planning.
- Potential space: knowing and not knowing in the treatment of traumatized children and young people.
- Capacity building and the reconception of political participation: a role for social care workers?
- Leadership in social work: a case of caveat emptor?
- Social care and the modern citizen: client, consumer, service user, manager and entrepreneur.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(8) - 2006
- Risk management paradigms in health and social services for professional decision making on the long-term care of older people.
- Involving young service users as co-researchers: possibilities, benefits and costs.
- Direct payments: creating a two-tiered system in social care?
- Cultural barriers to the disclosure of child sexual abuse in Asian communities: listening to what women say.
- Opportunities and risks: models of good practice in commissioning foster-care.
- Life satisfaction among Israeli youth in residential treatment care.
- A contested identity: an exploration of the competing social and political discourse concerning the identification and positioning of young people of inter-racial parentage.
- Mission impossible? Critical practice in social work.
- Social work, merit and ethnic diversity.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(7) - 2006
- Language policy and provision in social service organizations.
- Advocacy for black and minority ethnic communities: understandings and expectations.
- Factorial surveys: using vignettes to study professional judgement.
- A caring profession? The ethics of care and social work with older people.
- Social support interventions in migrant populations.
- Global social justice for older people: the case for an international convention on the rights of older people.
- United we stand? Partnership working in health and social care and the role of social work in services for older people.
- International perspectives on the use of community treatment orders: implications for mental health social workers.
- Community treatment orders for people with serious mental illness: a New Zealand study.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(6) - 2006
- Temporal discrimination and parents with learning difficulties in the child protection system.
- The influence of media and respondent characteristics on the outcome of a campaign to recruit host families for adults with learning disability.
- Moral positioning: service user experiences of challenging behaviour in learning disability services.
- Knowledge and reasoning in social work: educating for humane judgement.
- Recent changes in adoption and fostering in Spain.
- Care proceedings: exploring the relationship between case duration and achieving permanency for the child.
- The Framework for the Assessment of Children in Need and their Families: a basis for a ‘therapeutic’ encounter?
- College based placement co-ordinators in the United Kingdom: their perceptions of stress.
- Developing perceptions of competence during practice learning.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(5) - 2006
- Community development, partnership governance and dilemmas of professionalization: profiling and assessing the case of Ireland.
- Using video interviewing in the assessment of social work communication skills.
- Professional perspectives on decision making about the long-term care of older people.
- Social policy for social work: a teaching agenda.
- Self-reflection in reflective practice: a note of caution.
- Genealogy’s desire: practices of kinship amongst Lesbian and Gay foster-carers and adopters.
- Disabled children, maltreatment and attachment.
- Participation of disabled children and young people in decision making within social services departments: A survey of current and recent activities in England.
- The sound of silence: listening to what unaccompanied asylum-seeking children say and do not say.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(4) - 2006
- Children’s views of family group conferences.
- Inter-agency information sharing in health and social care services: the role of professional culture.
- End-of-year treatment termination: responses of social work student trainees.
- The role of religion and spirituality in social work practice: views and experiences of social workers and students.
- Parents whose children with learning disabilities and challenging behaviour attend 52-week residential schools: their perceptions of services received and expectations of the future.
- Victoria Climbié Inquiry Data Corpus Project: using the Delphi Method in multidisciplinary child protection research.
- Paved with good intentions: the pathway to adoption and the costs of delay.
- Contact with family members and its impact on adolescents and their foster placements.
- Fifteen years of family group conferencing: coordinators talk about their experiences in Aotearoa New Zealand.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(3) - 2006
- Perspectives on social care practice in Romania: supporting the development of professional learning and practice.
- Stagnation as a distinct clinical syndrome: comparing 'Yu' (Stagnation) in traditional Chinese medicine with depression.
- Ethical guidelines for study abroad: can we transform ugly Americans into engaged global citizens.
- The impact of political conflict on social work: experiences from Northern Ireland, Israel and Palestine.
- The global-local dialectic: challenges for African scholarship and social work in the post-colonial world.
- Broadening the conceptual lens on language in social work: difference, diversity and English as a global language.
- An 'ecospiritual' perspective: finally, a place for indigenous approaches.
- Globalization and social work: international and local implications.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(2) - 2006
- Community development in the 21st century: a case of conditional development.
- Welfare rights advocacy in a specialist health and social care setting: a service audit.
- The tension between mainstream competence and specialization in adult protection: an evaluation of the role of the adult protection co-ordinator.
- Discursive struggles within social welfare: restaging teen motherhood.
- Investigation or initial assessment of child concerns? The impact of the refocusing initiative on social work practice.
- Young people, risk taking and risk making: some thoughts for social work.
- Recognizing social work.
- Assessing the quality of knowledge in social care: exploring the potential of a set of generic standards.
- Narrating significant experience: reflective accounts and the production of (self) knowledge.
British Journal of Social Work, 36(1) - 2006
- A camel’s nose under the tent? Some Australian perspectives on confidentiality and social work practice.
- Moral character in social work.
- Coping styles in persons recovering from substance abuse.
- Rethinking family support in the current policy context.
- Putting programme into practice: the introduction of concurrent planning into mainstream adoption and fostering services.
- Children’s voices: the views of vulnerable children on their service providers and the relevance of services they receive.
- Social work, asset-based welfare and the Child Trust Fund.
- Social work, new public management and the language of ‘service user’.
- Patients with minor mental disorders leading to sickness absence: a feasibility study for social workers’ participation in a treatment programme.
- An inclusive approach to knowledge for mental health social work practice and policy.
British Journal of Social Work, 35(8) - 2005
- Recognizing but not acknowledging: on using research information in social work with elderly people suffering from dementia.
- Adults with a learning disability living with elderly carers talk about planning for the future: aspirations and concerns.
- Irish social workers in Britain and the politics of (mis) recognition.
- Why gender matters for Every Child Matters.
- Giving a voice to women survivors of domestic violence through recognition as a service user group.
- Domestic violence and substance use: tackling complexity.
- Risk and resilience in long-term foster-care.
- An experiment in helping foster-carers manage challenging behaviour.
- Social work and narrative ethics.
- Practitioner research: evidence or critique?
British Journal of Social Work, 35(7) - 2005
- Gaining access to data sources in statutory social work agencies: the long and winding road.
- Carers’ perspectives on the internet: implications for social and health care service provision.
- Postmodernization: a phase we’re going through? Management in social care.
- A study of a total social services care population and its inter-agency shared care populations.
- Endangered children: experiencing and surviving the State as failed parent and grandparent.
- ‘Dealing with it’: experiences of young fathers in and leaving care .
- Lay assessors and care home inspections: is there a future?.
- Older people and permanent ccare: whose decision?
- Stress and pressures in mental health social work: the worker speaks.
- The state of care management in learning disability and mental health services 12 years into community care.
- Researching vulnerable groups: ethical issues and the effective conduct of research in local authorities.
- Accounting for ethical difficulties in social welfare work: issues, problems and dilemmas.
British Journal of Social Work, 35(6) - 2005
- Using evaluative research to support practitioners and service users in undertaking reflective writing for public dissemination.
- Professional ideologies and preferences in social work: a British study in global perspective.
- A small-scale study of the relationship between measures of deprivation and child-care referrals.
- English local authority powers, responsibilities and guidelines for managing the care home closure process.
- When and how does ethnicity matter? A cross-national study of social work responses to ethnicity in child protection cases.
- The knowledge spectrum: a framework for teaching knowledge and its use in social work practice.
- On the inside: a narrative review of mental health inpatient services.
- Evidence-based practice, descriptive research and the resilience-schema-gender-brain functioning (RSGB) assessment.
- Professionals assessing clients' needs and eligibility for electric scooters in the Netherlands: both gatekeepers and clients' advocates.
- Do you speak English? Language barriers in child protection social work with minority ethnic families.
- Constructive social work and personal construct theory: the case of psychological trauma.
British Journal of Social Work, 35(5) - 2005
- Critical commentary: looked after children: time for change?
- Mothers’ coping strategies as child and family care service applicants.
- Help-seeking among Muslim Arab divorcees in Israel.
- Reassessing a theory of professional expertise: a cross-national investigation of expert mental health social workers.
- Assessment and social construction: conflict or co-creation?
- Men who murder children inside and outside the family.
- Evidence–based work in the Dutch welfare sector.
- Trusting in social work.
- Probation and social work.
- Looking back: the view from here.
- Social work as a social institution.
- Genericism and specialization: the story since 1970.
British Journal of Social Work, 35(4) - 2005
- A systems approach to investigating child abuse deaths.
- Movers and stayers in care management in adult services.
- Young male street workers: life histories and current experiences
- Theorizing sexuality, sexual abuse and residential children’s homes: adding gender to the equation.
- Use of critical consciousness in anti-oppressive social work practice: disentangling power dynamics at personal and structural levels
- Research as social work: participatory research in learning disability.
British Journal of Social Work, 35(3) - 2005
- The nature and effects of violence against child-protection social workers: providing effective support.
- Differences in the seriousness of problems and deservingness of help: Swedish social workers’ assessments of single mothers and fathers .
- Human services management in rural contexts.
- Asian carers’ perceptions of care assessment and support in the community.
- Advocacy in practice: the troubled position of advocates in adult services.
- A child’s eye view: dementia in children’s literature.
British Journal of Social Work, 35(2) - 2005
- Would palliative care patients benefit from social workers’ retaining the traditional ‘casework’ role rather than Working as care managers?: a prospective serial qualitative interview study.
- Mapping the needs of children in need .
- Foster carer strain and its impact on parenting and placement outcomes for adolescents.
- Meaning-based quality-of-life measurement: a way forward in conceptualizing and measuring client outcomes?.
- Doing good and winning love: social work and fictional autobiographies by Charles Dickens and John Stroud.
- ‘I’m like a tree a million miles from the water’s edge’: social care and Inclusion of older people with visual impairment.
- Promoting prevention: targeting family-based risk and protective factors for drug use and youth offending in Swansea.
British Journal of Social Work, 35(1) - 2005
- Community practice researchers as reflective learners.
- Evaluating children's services: recent conceptual and methodological developments.
- The research potential of mental-health social workers: a qualitative study of the views of senior mental-health service managers.
- Language and the shaping of social work.
- Face-to-face contact post adoption: views from the triangles.
- Assessing the barriers to achieving genuine housing choice for adults with a learning disability: the views of family carers and professionals.
- The Swedish myth: the corporal punishment ban and child death statistics.
- The Face Your Fear Club: therapeutic group work with young children as a response to community trauma in Northern Ireland.
British Journal of Social Work, 34(8) - 2004
- Show me the way to go home: a narrative review of the literature on delayed hospital discharges and older people.
- Internationalizing women’s struggle against discrimination: the UN Women’s Convention and the Optional Protocol.
- Social work and child-centred Family Court mediation.
- Good practice in the education of children in residential care.
- Working with parental substance misuse: dilemmas for practice.
- Children in need?: listening to children whose parent or carer is HIV positive.
- The impact of audit on social work practice.
British Journal of Social Work, 34(7) - 2004
- The impact of criminal conviction disclosure on the self-reported offending profile of social work students.
- A decade after Orkney: towards a practice model for social work in the remoter areas of Scotland .
- Families and serious mental illness: working with loss and ambivalence.
- An evaluation of social support intervention with depressed mothers in child and family care.
- Returning to normality: substance users’ work histories and perceptions of work during and after recovery .
- The trans-theoretical model of change: a reliable blueprint for assessment in work with children and families?
- The impacts of acculturative stress and social competence on the mental health of mainland Chinese immigrant youth in Hong Kong.
British Journal of Social Work, 34(6) - 2004
- Survival analysis in social work research.
- Sleepwalking through an epidemic: why social work should wake up to the threat of Hepatitis C.
- Street-level bureaucracy, social work and the (exaggerated) death of discretion.
- Gender and illicit drug use.
- Care proceedings under the 1989 Children Act: rhetoric and reality .
- Identifying the extent of challenging behaviour in adult learning disability services.
- Learning lessons from the past or re-visiting old mistakes: social work and community development in Northern Ireland .
- Religion and spirituality in social work education and direct practice at the millennium: a survey of UK social workers.
British Journal of Social Work, 34(5) - 2004
- Stress in social services: mental well-being, constraints and job satisfaction.
- Which came first, the chicken or the egg? Examining the relationship between child neglect and poverty.
- Enabling adults with learning disabilties to articulate their housing need.
- Anti-oppressive social work practice with women in prison: discursive reconstructions and alternative practice.
- Formalising the unformalised practitioners' communication of knowledge in practice.
- A national survey of approved social workers in the UK: information, communication and training needs.
- Reforming professional training and protecting vulnerable adults from abuse: a thematic analysis of the new social work degree's prescribed curriculum.
- Family, community, church and state: natural parents talking about adoption in Ireland.
British Journal of Social Work, 34(4) - 2004
- The characteristics of children with a disability looked after away from home and their future service needs.
- Social workers’ responses to experiences of fear.
- Managing assessment: quality planning in assessment procedures of the Dutch Child Protection Board .
- Toward a theoretical framework for perinatal bereavement.
- Questions raised for local authorities when old people are evicted from their care homes .
- A description and analysis of multi-sectoral fostering practice in the United Kingdom .
British Journal of Social Work, 34(3) - 2004
- Medicalization of social workers in mental health services in Hong Kong.
- Responding to youth crime in Scotland.
- Patterns of placement, management and outcome for sexually abused and/or abusing children in substitute care .
- Adolescent and young adult male-to-female transsexuals: pathways to prostitution .
- Early recognition of and responses to dementia: health professionals’ views of social services’ role and performance .
- Integration and targeting of community care for people with severe and enduring mental health problems: users’ experiences of the care programme approach and care management .
- Beyond power discourse: alienation and social work.
British Journal of Social Work, 34(2) - 2004
- The reprofessionalization of social work: collaborative approaches for achieving professional recognition .
- The influence of performance measurement on child welfare policy and practice.
- Parents’ views on social work interventions in child welfare cases .
- A comparison of child-sex-abuse-related and mental-disorder-related suicide in a six-year cohort of regional suicides: the importance of the child protection-psychiatric interface .
- The vulnerabilities of children whose parents have been sexually abused in childhood: towards a new framework .
- Non-statutory mental health social work in primary care: a chance for renewal?.
British Journal of Social Work, 34(1) - 2004
- An unacceptable role for social work: implementing immigration policy.
- Citizenship, social inclusion and confidentiality.
- Service users and practitioners reunited: the key component for social work reform.
- Emancipatory social work?: opportunity or oxymoron .
- Social work, liberty and law.
- Liberty and respect in child protection.
- Social work values: the moral core of the profession.
British Journal of Social Work, 33(8) - 2003
- A kind of loving: a model of effective foster care.
- The reality of visions: contemporary theories of spirituality in social work.
- Working in multidisciplinary Community Mental Health Teams: the impact on social workers and health professionals of Integrated mental health care.
- Quality indicators: disabled children's and parents' prioritisations and experiences of quality criteria when using different types of support services .
- Professional advocacy as a force for resistance in child welfare.
- Professional values and ethics in social work: reconsidering postmodernism?.
- Outline of a critical best practice perspective on social work and social care.
British Journal of Social Work, 33(7) - 2003
- Bringing down the 'Berlin Wall': the health and social care divide.
- Multidisciplinary reflections on assessment for compulsory admission: the views of approved social workers, general practitioners, ambulance crews, police, community psychiatric nurses and psychiatrists .
- Probation training and the community justice curriculum .
- Mapping comparative empirical studies of European social work.
- What do care managers do?: a study of working practice in older peoples' services.
- Use of single-system research to evaluate the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioural treatment of schizophrenia .
- Matches and mismatches: the contribution of carers and children to the success of foster placements.
- An empirical study into the psychosocial reactions of staff working as helpers to those affected in the aftermath of two traumatic incidents .
British Journal of Social Work, 33(6) - 2003
- A support team for foster carers: the views and perceptions of service users.
- Establishing virtue in social work.
- Realist evaluation for practice .
- Social work in accident and emergency departments: a better deal for older patients' health?.
- The significance of past abuse to current intervention strategies with depressed mothers in child and family care.
- Nearest and dearest?: the neglect of lesbians in caring relationships.
- Are young people in correctional institutions different from community students who have never been convicted?: differences in internalising and externalising behaviours .
- Joint reviews: judgement day and beyond .
British Journal of Social Work, 33(5) - 2003
- Social work and child mental health: psychosocial principles in community practice.
- Social workers' experiences of fear.
- Administrative justice and charging for long-term care.
- The language of siege: military metaphors in the spoken language of social work.
- Gender and psychotropics: toward a third wave framework .
- Technicality and indeterminacy in probation practice: a case study.
British Journal of Social Work, 33(4) June 2003 - 2003
- Parenting assessment in a psychiatric other and baby unit .
- Images of contract: an empirical study of the use of theory in practice.
- Older people and access to care.
- Asian carers' experiences of medical and social care: the case of cerebral palsy .
- Child sexual abuse and the male monopoly: an empirical exploration of gender and a sexual interest in children.
- Swimming with dolphins: the assessment framework, new Labour and new tools for social work with children and families .
- Hidden gems: systematically searching electronic databases for research publications for social work and social care .
British Journal of Social Work, 33(3) - 2003
- The role of father involvement and mother involvement in adolescents' psychological well-being.
- The trouble with harry: why the 'new agenda of life politics' fails to convince .
- Social exclusion, poverty, health and social care in Tower Hamlets: the perspectives of families on the impact of the Family Support Service.
- 'A pair of stout shoes and an umbrella': the role of the mental welfare officer in delivering community care in East Anglia: 1946-1970 .
- Someone who treats you as an ordinary human being: homeless youth examine the quality of professional care .
- Young men living through and with child sexual abuse: a practitioner research study .
- The right kind of telling?: locating the teaching of interviewing skills within a systems framework .
- Narrating love and abuse in intimate relationships.
British Journal of Social Work, 33(2) - 2003
- Taking fathers seriously .
- Distress among children whose separated or divorced parents cannot agree arrangements for them.
- Mental health and domestic violence: ‘I call it symptoms of abuse’.
- Contingent on context? Social work and the State in Australia, Britain, and the USA .
- Joint reviews: the methodology in action .
- Practitioners as rule using analysts: a further development of process knowledge in social work .
- Rationales Provided for Risk Assessments and for Recommended interventions in child protection: a comparison between Canadian and Israeli professionals.
British Journal of Social Work, 33(1) - 2003
- The social work assessment of parenting: an exploration .
- Considering the countryside: is there a case for rural social work?.
- The implications of immigration for the training of social work professionals in Spain.
- An outcomes focus in carer assessment and review: value and challenge.
- Combating racial discrimination: the effectiveness of an international legal regime.
- Rethinking professional practice: the contributions of social constructionism and the feminist 'ethics of care'.
- Cutting edge issues in social work research .
British Journal of Social Work, 32(8) - 2002
- Restoring power to social work practice.
- The role and achievements of a professional association in the late Twentieth Century: The British Association of Social Workers 1970-2000 .
- Organisation and financing of the social services in Bulgaria.
- The Heimler scale of social functioning: a partial validation in South Africa.
- Construction of the victim impact statement for sexually abused minors: a dramaturgy approach.
- What lies underneath?: an inter-organisational analysis of collaboration between education and social work.
- A natural locally-based networking approach for singleton disabled elderly: implementation and case illustration.
- Virtue ethics and social work: being lucky, realistic, and not doing ones duty.
British Journal of Social Work, 32(7) - 2002
- Knowledge and perceptions of child-care social workers about ADHD .
- Adding meaning to measurement: the value of qualitative methods in practice research .
- Gender, ethnicity and vulnerability in young women in local authority care.
- The 1998 Children's Act: problems of enforcement in Ghana.
- A critical perspective on quality within the personal social services: prospects and concerns.
- Paedophiles, pornography and the internet: assessment issues .
- The Victorian ethical foundations of social work in England:continuity and contradiction..
- Yes minister: reviewing the 'Looking After Children' experience and identifying the messages for social work research.
British Journal of Social Work, 32(6) - 2002
- Probation and social justice.
- Social work: gender, care and justice.
- Mental health and social justice: gender, race and psychological consequences of unfairness.
- Catch 22-Black Workers' Role in Equal Opportunities for Black Service Users
- Taking rights structurally: disability, rights and social worker responses to direct payments.
- Taking care of later life: a matter of justice?
- Social work and social justice in Northern Ireland: towards a new occupational space.
- Social movements, social justice and social work.
- Marginalized children as social actors for social justice in South Asia.
- New Labour, social justice and children: political calculation and the deserving-undeserving schism.
- Poverty, social work and social justice.
British Journal of Social Work, 32(5) - 2002
- Assessing the impact of social factors on the mental health of Chinese at risk adolescents in Hong Kong.
- Where does it begin?: a comparative perspective on the professional preferences of first year social work students.
- Can the piper call the tune?: innovation and experiment with deprived families in Britain 1940s-1980s, the work of family service units.
- Videotaped evidence of children: applications and implications of the Memorandum of Good Practice.
- Victimisation, care and justice: reflections on the experiences of victims/survivors involved in large scale historical investigations of child sexual abuse in residential institutions.
- Managing human services in a market environment: what role for social workers?
- The witch hunt metaphor (and accusations against residential care workers).
British Journal of Social Work, 32(4) - 2002
- Children's homicide and road deaths in England and Wales and the USA: an international comparison 1974-1997.
- No Irish need apply: social work in Britain and the history and politics of exclusionary paradigms and practices.
- Joint reviews: retracing the trajectory, decoding the terms.
- The experience and practice of approved social workers in Northern Ireland.
- Developing a sensitive practitioner research methodology for studying the impact of child sexual abuse.
- Living for the Brethren: idealism, social work's lost enlightenment strain.
- Euthanasia: Israeli social workers' experiences, attitudes and meanings.
British Journal of Social Work, 32(3) - 2002
- Outcome measurement and service evaluation - a note on research design.
- The social construction of street children: configuration and implications.
- Working 'between the idea and the reality': ambiguities and tensions in care managers' work.
- An innovative project for young people in care who have been sexually abused.
- Closing the circle: social workers' responses to multi-agency procedures on older age abuse.
- The quality of parenting of individuals who failed to thrive as children.
- Caring for citizenship.
British Journal of Social Work, 32(2) - 2002
- A Code of Ethics for Social Work and Social Care Research.
- Problems and concerns of welfare paraprofessionals working with refugees.
- Indicators for placement in foster care.
- Important yet ignored: problems of 'expertise' in emergency duty social work.
- Storylines in racialized times: racism and anti-racism in Toronto's social services.
- Carers of people with learning disabilities, and their experience of the 1995 Carers Act.
- Adolescents who sexually abuse and residential accommodation: issues of risk and vulnerability.
- Rethinking empowerment: a postmodern reappraisal for emancipatory practice.
British Journal of Social Work, 32(1) - 2002
- Depressed mothers' experience of partnership in child and family care.
- Participation strategies of activist-volunteers in the life cycle of community crisis.
- The changing conditions of social work research.
- Reflections on gender, knowledge and values in social work.
- Social work with immigrants and refugees: developing a participation-based framework for anti-oppressive practice. Part 2.
- The possibility of promoting user participation in working with high-risk youth.
British Journal of Social Work, 31(1) - 2002
British Journal of Social Work, 31(6) - 2001
- Social work with immigrants and refugees: developing a participation-based framework for anti-oppressive practice.
- The influence of child protection orientation on child welfare practice.
- Developing anti-oprressive empowering social work practice with older lesbian women and gay men.
- Learning from a 'Murri Way'.
- Child protection and the media: lessons from the last three decades.
- Comparative hypothesis assessment and quasi triangulation as process knowledge assessment strategies in social work practice.
- Beyond social constructionism: critical realism and social work.
- 1998 Human Rights Act: social work's new benchmark.
British Journal of Social Work, 31(5) - 2001
- The ideology, policy and practice of adult probation service in Israel.
- The impact of in-service training within social services.
- Social workers who move into private practice: the impact of the socio-economic context.
- Constructivism in social work: towards a participative practice viability.
- Communication in care and coercion: institutional interactions between family supervisors and parents.
- The changing nature and context of social work research.
British Journal of Social Work, 31(4) - 2001
- Regulation or fragmentation? Directions for social work under New Labour.
- Social work responses to 'New Labour' in continental European countries.
- The impact of New Labour health policy on social services: a new deal for service users' health.
- Tough love: social work, social exclusion and the Third Way.
- The impact of the first term of the New Labour Government on social work in Britain: the interface between education policy and social work.
- Voices from the front line: state social workers and New Labour.
British Journal of Social Work, 31(3) - 2001
- A comment on Stroud and Pritchard: child homicide, psychiatric disorder and dangerousness: a review and an empirical approach.
- A review of car crime in England and Wales.
- What makes for successful groupwork? a survey of agencies in the UK.
- Differential assessment of residential group care for children and young people.
- Masking hegemonic masculinity: reconstructing the paedophile as the dangerous stranger.
- No-one else could understand: women's experiences of a support group run by and for mothers of sexually abused children.
- Social work at the crossroads.
- The long- term outcome of reunions between adult adopted people and their birth mothers.
British Journal of Social Work, 31(2) - 2001
- Language
- Trust and confidence: possibilities for social work in 'high modernity'.
- Searching again and again: Inclusion heterogeneity and social work research.
- Facing adulthood alone: the long-term impact of family break-up and infant institutions a longitudinal study.
- Developing an interactive approach in social work research: the example of a research study on head injury.
- Child homicide psychiatric disorder and dangerousness: a review and an empirical approach.
- The motives of foster parents their family and work circumstances.
British Journal of Social Work, 31(1) - 2001
- Children's and young people's experiences in various residential arrangements: a longitudinal study to evaluate criteria for custody and residence decision making.
- Some considerations on the validity of evidence-based practice in social work.
- Social work: individualisation and life politics.
- Tracing the contours of postmodern social work.
- Partnership between the probation service and voluntary sector organisations.
- Critical commentary: social work in Ireland.
- Research note: parental family structure and adult expectations of familial support in times of emotional need.
- Homosexuality and heterosexism: views from academics in the helping professions.
- Social workers' use of the language of social justice.
British Journal of Social Work, 30(6) - 2000
- Gaining access to looked after children for research purposes: lessons learned.
- Informal care in farming families in Northern Ireland: some considerations for social work.
- Social support in later life: a study of three areas.
- Discovering what children think: connections between research and practice.
- The extent and nature of known cases of institutional child sexual abuse.
- Stress: the perceptions of social work lectures in Britain.
- Contemporary perspectives in the evaluation of practice.
- Where has all the care management gone? The challenge of Parkinson's disease to the health and social care interface.
- Don't shake the baby: towards a prevention strategy.
- Ecological influences on parenting and child development.
British Journal of Social Work, 30(5) - 2000
- Exploring the experiences of Chinese in drugs treatment programs in Vancouver.
- The role of family care-givers for an older person resident in a care home.
- Consultancy to groupwork programmes for adult male sex offenders: some reflections on knowledge and processes.
- Children and young people with a hidden disability: an examination of the social work role.
- Decision making by senior social workers at point of first referral.
- The mentor/monitor debate in criminal justice: 'what works' for offenders.
- 'Anti-Oppressive Practice': Emancipation or appropriation.
British Journal of Social Work, 30(4) - 2000
- Social work, social networks and network knowledge.
- Service users' knowledge and social work theory: conflict or collaboration?
- Reflexivity and the development of process knowledge in social work: a classification and empirical study.
- Some thoughts on the relationship between theory and practice in social work.
- The place of research in social work education.
British Journal of Social Work, 30(3) - 2000
- An evaluation of motivational interviewing as a method of intervention with clients in a probation setting.
- Stress factors and mental health of carers with relatives suffering from schizophrenia in Hong Kong: implications for culturally sensitive practices.
- Working with creative creatures: towards a Christian paradigm for social work theory, with some practical implications.
- Constructing social work identity based on the reflexive self.
- Workers and helpers: perspectives on children's labour 1899-1999.
- Researching social care for minority ethnic older people: implications of some Scottish research.
- Applying a community needs profiling approach to tackling service user poverty.
British Journal of Social Work, 30(2) - 2000
- Who volunteers?
- Going missing from residential and foster care: linking biographies and contexts.
- The trouble with foster care: the impact of stressful 'events' on foster carers.
- Childcare with gloves on: protecting children and young people in residential care.
- Child maltreatment: differences in perceptions between parents in low income and middle income neighbourhoods.
- The assessment relationship: interactions between social workers and parents in child protection assessments.
British Journal of Social Work, 30(1) - 2000
- Children's adjustment over time in foster care: cross-informant agreement, stability and placement disruption.
- What kind of people are we? 'Race', anti-racism and social welfare research.
- Post-Fordism, the Welfare State and the Personal Social Services: a comparison of Australia and Britain.
- Bridging the divide: elders and the assessment process.
- Racial identity attitudes and self-esteem of black adolescents in residential care: an exploratory study.
- Parenting by men who abuse women: issues and dilemmas.
- Lesbian and gay issues in social work with young people: resilience and success through confronting, conforming and escaping.
- Community work.
British Journal of Social Work, 29(6) - 1999
- Value bases in social work education.
- State social work and social citizenship in Britain: from clientism to consumerism.
- The social education gap: report of a Dutch peer-consultation project on family policy.
- Financial hardship and shame: a tentative model to understand the social and health effects of unemployment.
- The Care Programme Approach: dimensions of evaluation.
British Journal of Social Work, 29(5) - 1999
- Reflexive modernity and social work in Ireland: a response to Powell.
- Perspectives on 'race' and adoption: the views of student social workers.
- The psychiatrization of post-traumatic distress: issues for social workers.
- Culture religion and infertility: a South African perspective.
- The social work role in assisted conception.
- Un-charted territory? Experiences of the purchaser/provider split in local authority children's services.
- The determinants of expenditure on children's personal social services.
- Research note: research and empowerment.
British Journal of Social Work, 29(4) - 1999
- Family group conferences: user empowerment of family self-reliance? - a development from Lupton.
- The psychosocial 'diagnosis' of depression in mothers: an exploration and analysis.
- Insights from cult survivors regarding group support.
- Visitors views of residential homes.
- Tackling inequalities in physical health: a new objective for social work.
- Language and practice: minority language provision within the Guardian ad litem service.
- There's no such thing as reflection.
British Journal of Social Work, 29(3) - 1999
- Building care management competence in services for people with learning disabilities.
- The social history of social work: the issue of the 'problem family', 1940-1970.
- Working in partnership in child protection: the conflicts.
- User-practitioner transactions in the new culture of community care.
- Perceptions of stigma and user involvement in child welfare services.
- Breaking the rules: a group work perspective on focus group research.
British Journal of Social Work, 29(2) - 1999
- Evaluating social work and medical practice with black and ethnic minority groups using the clinical audit model.
- Black, with a white parent, a positive and achievable identity.
- White mothers, mixed-parentage children and child welfare.
- The African-centred worldview: developing a paradigm for social work.
- Anti-discriminatory practice: pedagogical struggles and challenges.
- Connecting anti-racist and anti-oppressive theory and practice: retrenchment or reappraisal?
British Journal of Social Work, 29(1) - 1999
- The enduring relevance of case management.
- Care management and information provision: towards a reasoned method of assessing the range and extent of problems and needs in child-care social work.
- Social work and the 'missionary zeal to whip the heathen along the path of righteousness'.
- Prior criminality and employment of social workers with substantial access to children: a decision board analysis.
- Mapping child-care social work in the final years of the twentieth century: a critical response to the 'looking after children' system.
- Decision making in child protection: the use of theoretical, empirical and procedural knowledge by novices and experts and implications for fieldwork placement.
- Understanding drug-using clients' views of substitute prescribing.
British Journal of Social Work, 26(6) - 1999
British Journal of Social Work, 28(6) - 1998
- Informal carers of adolescents and adults with learning difficulties from the south Asian communities: family circumstances, service support and carer stress.
- Attitudes, stereotypes and anti-discriminatory education: developing themes from Sullivan.
- A consumer study of young people's views on their educational social worker: engagement as a measure of an effective relationship.
- Participation and child protection: the importance of context.
- Working together to protect children on the child protection register: myth or reality.
- Care management and professional autonomy: the impact of community care legislation on social work with older people.
- Scientific management, bureau-professionalism, new managerialism: the labour process of state social work.
British Journal of Social Work, 28(5) - 1998
- The 1996 research assessment exercise and the response of social work academics.
- Practice validity, reflexivity and knowledge for social work.
- Dip.S.W. students and anti-discriminatory practice: questions of learning outcomes and assessment.
- Victim-offender mediation in the Italian juvenile justice system: the role of the social worker.
- The post- and the anti-: analysing change and changing analyses in social work.
- The ontology of ageing.
- Evangelical Christianity, secular humanism, and the genesis of British social work.
- Discourse and resistance in care assessment: integrated living and community care.
British Journal of Social Work, 28(4) - 1998
- Making connections - building bridges: research into action - ten years of the child and woman abuse studies unit.
- Probation officers working with men.
- Women whose children have been sexually abused: reflections on a debate.
- Gender and the child protection process.
- Moving beyond litigation and positivism: another approach to accusations of sexual abuse.
- Sexual abuse by men who work with children: an exploratory study.
- Is social work a 'non-traditional' occupation for men?
- Femininity, sexuality and professionalism in the Children's departments.
British Journal of Social Work, 28(3) - 1998
- Placing children on child protection registers: risk indicators and local authority differences.
- Legal liability and accountability for child-care decisions.
- Self-determination and paternalism in community care: practice and prospects.
- Inter-agency approaches to domestic violence and the role of social services.
- Social workers' experience of distress: moving towards change?
- Working in the social services: job satisfaction, stress and violence.
- The professional challenges of reflexive modernization: social work in Ireland.
British Journal of Social Work, 28(2) - 1998
- Disability and social work: applications from poststructuralism, postmodernism and feminism.
- Risk assessment using psychological profiling techniques: an evaluation of possibilities.
- Eligibility criteria for cash assistance for older and disabled people in Hungary: a model for countries in passage from a planned to a market economy.
- Professional ethics in social work - what future?
- At the edge of the frame: beyond science and art in social work.
- Understanding young people and prostitution: a foundation for practice?
- Euthanasia and assisted suicide: a survey of registered social workers in British Columbia.
British Journal of Social Work, 28(1) - 1998
- Improving social workers' knowledge base in child protection work.
- A qualitative study of social work assessment in cases of alleged child abuse.
- Social work students' perceptions of child abuse: an international comparison and postmodern interpretation of its findings.
- Risk, advanced liberalism and child welfare: the need to rediscover uncertainty and ambiguity.
- Looking after children: a new approach or just an exercise in form filling? A response to Knight and Caveney.
- Assessment and action records: will they promote good parenting?
- What is like to be looked after by a local authority.
- User empowerment or family self-reliance? The family group conference model.
British Journal of Social Work, 27(6) - 1997
- The practitioner and 'naive theory' in social work intervention processes.
- The limits of support in foster care.
- The client group preferences of diploma in social work students: what are they, do they change during programmes and what variables affect them?
- Degrees of involvement: the interaction of focus and commitment in area child protection committees.
- Keeping social work honest: evaluating as profession and practice.
- Social work practice in child and family care: a study of maternal depression.
- Social work tomorrow: towards a critical understanding of technology in social work.
British Journal of Social Work, 27(5) - 1997
- Beyond retroduction? - hermeneutics, reflexivity and social work practice.
- Taking social work seriously: the contribution of the functional school.
- Maintenance of the effect of training in communication skills: a controlled follow-up study of level of communicated empathy.
- Crossing boundaries: an exercise in partnership provision.
- Discourses of child protection and child welfare.
- Reading social work: competing discourses in the Rules and Requirements for the Diploma in Social Work.
British Journal of Social Work, 27(4) - 1997
- On patient satisfaction in cerebral palsy care.
- Keyworkers re-examined: good practice, quality of care and empowerment in residential care of older people.
- Participants or recipients - disabled people's involvement in a European programme.
- Social workers' attitudes to lesbian clients.
- Child sexual abuse allegations in the context of divorce: issues for mothers.
- Social work and blood vengeance: the Bedouin-Arab case.
- Reconciling cash and care: home care charges and benefit checks in social services.
- User involvement in services - incorporation or challenge?
British Journal of Social Work, 27(3) - 1997
- What has gender got to do with it? Exploring physically abusive behaviour towards children.
- Towards a theory of expertise.
- The racial structure of social work in a South African Province.
- Ambiguities in decision making: social work's response to 'glue-sniffing' on Scotland.
- The rise of relativism: the future of theory and knowledge development in social work.
- Community work, social work: green and postmodern?
British Journal of Social Work, 27(2) - 1997
- Parton, Howe and postmodernity: a critical comment on mistaken identity.
- The prevention of AIDS among injecting drug users.
- Prior agency contact and physical abuse in cases of child homicide.
- I needed to be told that I hadn't failed: experiences of violence against probation staff and of agency support.
- The managers of social work: the experiences and identification of third tier social services managers and the implications for future practice.
- Dying and bereavement, spirituality and social work in a market economy of welfare.
British Journal of Social Work, 27(1) - 1997
- Sponsored places: the use of independent day-care services to support children in need.
- The abduction of credibility: a reply to John Paley.
- Implementing care management: issues in relation to the new community care.
- Satanist abuse and alien abduction: a comparative analysis theorizing temporal lobe activity as a possible connection between anomalous memories.
- The problem of engaging men in child protection work.
- Risk and supervision: social work response to referred user problems.
- Repeat victim support.
British Journal of Social Work, 26(6) - 1996
- Ethnicity and caring for a disabled child: the case of children with sickle cell or thalassaemia.
- Applying for money: the encounter between social workers and clients - a question of morality.
- Community social work in a market environment: a British-American exchange of technologies and experience.
- Maintaining sibling relationships - neglected dimension in child care practice.
- Avoidable and unavoidable mistakes in child protection work.
- Government, social services departments and the health of children and young people: which way forward?
British Journal of Social Work, 26(5) - 1996
- Stress and organizational culture.
- Applying single-case evaluation in social work.
- Specialism, genericism and others: does it make a difference? A study of social work services to elderly people.
- Low socio-economic status children are disadvantaged in the provision of school-based child protection programmes.
- A study of post-adoption contact in compulsory adoptions.
- Birth mothers and their mental health: unchartered territory.
British Journal of Social Work, 26(4) - 1996
- Current issues in child protection: an overview of the debates in contemporary journals.
- Search for an indicator of effective child protection in a re-analysis of child homicide in the major Western countries 1973-1992: a response to Lindsey and Trocme and Macdonald.
- Neighbourhoods, networks and child abuse.
- Decision making in child protection.
- Sexual abuse as a moral event.
- Parental participation in child protection work: rethinking the rhetoric.
- Sexually abuse children's and young people's perspectives on investigative interviews.
British Journal of Social Work, 26(3) - 1996
- Psychological distress in staff of a social services district office: a pilot study.
- Predictors of stress amongst social workers: an empirical study.
- The supervision of child protection work.
- A national survey of the investigation of child sexual abuse.
- Mental health and the Asian communities: a local survey.
- An examination of anti-racist and anti-oppressive theory and practice in social work education.
British Journal of Social Work, 26(2) - 1996
- Shared learning for doctors and social workers: evaluation of a programme.
- Student imagery of practice in social work and teacher education: a comparative research approach.
- Reshaping social work authorities in Scotland.
- Practice teaching and self-assessment: promoting a culture of accountability in social work.
- Dragged to market: being a profession in the postmodern world.
- Deprofessionalizing social work: anti-oppressive practice, competencies and postmodernism.
British Journal of Social Work, 26(1) - 1996
- Cost and stakeholder views: a combined approach to evaluating services.
- Implementing the Children's Act: the regulation of day-care services for young children.
- Unasked questions or unheard answers? Policy development in child sexual abuse.
- Children and literature.
- Black students' experience on social work courses: accentuating the positives.
Journals available in full text with an Athens for social care password
If you have an Athens for social care password, you can view 10261 full text articles from the following journals.
- A Life in the Day - 110 full text articles online
- Advances in Mental Health and Learning Disabilities - 68 full text articles online
- Ageing and Society - 413 full text articles online
- Aging and Mental Health - 443 full text articles online
- AIDS Care - 703 full text articles online
- British Journal of Forensic Practice - 113 full text articles online
- British Journal of Learning Disabilities - 190 full text articles online
- British Journal of Social Work - 799 full text articles online
- British Medical Journal - 612 full text articles online
- Child and Family Social Work - 278 full text articles online
- Child Welfare - 487 full text articles online
- Children and Schools - 165 full text articles online
- Disability and Society - 534 full text articles online
- Drugs and Alcohol Today - 38 full text articles online
- Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties - 158 full text articles online
- Ethics and Social Welfare - 63 full text articles online
- European Journal of Social Work - 241 full text articles online
- Family Process - 152 full text articles online
- Generations - 82 full text articles online
- Health and Social Care in the Community - 432 full text articles online
- Health and Social Work - 300 full text articles online
- Housing Care and Support - 158 full text articles online
- Journal of Adult Protection - 115 full text articles online
- Journal of Integrated Care - 181 full text articles online
- Journal of Intellectual and Developmental Disability - 220 full text articles online
- Journal of Interprofessional Care - 234 full text articles online
- Journal of Public Mental Health - 66 full text articles online
- Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law - 212 full text articles online
- Journal of Social Work Practice - 342 full text articles online
- Journal of Substance Use - 100 full text articles online
- Mental Health Religion and Culture - 45 full text articles online
- Mental Health Review - 76 full text articles online
- Mental Health Today - 332 full text articles online
- Practice - 456 full text articles online
- Quality in Ageing - 101 full text articles online
- Social Work - 472 full text articles online
- Social Work in Education - 63 full text articles online
- Social Work Research - 226 full text articles online
- Therapy Today - 167 full text articles online
- Tizard Learning Disability Review - 168 full text articles online
- Working with Older People - 146 full text articles online





