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Burnham, David The social worker speaks A history of social workers through the twentieth century
Ashgate, Farnham, 2012
The Social Worker Speaks charts the motivations, work
activities and attitudes of social workers across the
country from 1904 to 1989. The book is about workers in
the
public sector (from Poor Law to Social Services
Departments), probation and workers in the voluntary
field
(including early century philanthropic visiting societies
as
well as specialist societies such as the Children`s
Society
and the NSPCC). Where possible accounts by and the words
and
thoughts of social workers themselves are used.
Since the war, histories of social work have concentrated
on
practice theory and methods, developments instigated by
legislation, university training and professional status,
but there has been little attention paid to who social
workers were, what they believed, what they actually did,
and what they thought of what they did. Also, individual
social workers appearing in nearly all histories have
been
`leaders` - managers, teachers or academics, with people
who
did the job on the front line accorded barely a mention.
If part of the aim of this book is to remedy this partial
coverage, another aim is to offer a more human history of
social workers. There is too little celebration or humour
in
what has been published about the history of social
workers;
The Social Worker Speaks deliberately includes stories of
how social workers behaved, their frustrations and
triumphs,
passions and occasional sins. So this is deliberately not
a
history of social work, but a history of social workers -
the first of its kind.
Contents: Introduction; 1904-1914: visiting societies,
the
Poor Law and local activists; 1904-1914: missionaries,
inspectors, lady visitors and Mr Cramp the Almoner; 1914-
1930: the Great War and after: a new breed; 1919-1939:
public assistance, new ideas, old attitudes; 1939-1948:
the
impact of the Second World War; 1948-1971: social
workers:
public servants; 1948-1971: training, outsiders and
themes;
1971-1979: Seebohmising; 1980-1989: this is alright;
Afterword; Appendices; References; Index.
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