`This lively book critiques New Labour assumptions and implementation
of policies related to citizenship, communities and welfare reform and
the implications of current developments for social work. Focusing
explicitly on the UK, the book nevertheless draws on examples and
comparisions from other countries (including notably Australia and the
US, but also countries in the EU and Central and Eastern Europe), and
some of the concerns and arguments will be appreciated by readers
elsewhere′ - International Social Work `This book is a well-written
contribution to both the British Third Way debate and the welfare
state literature.... The book will appeal to upper-level
undergraduates as well as scholars of British politics and the welfare
state′ - Political Studies `Jordan begins by establishing New
Labour′s suspicion of local government framing its policy on
welfare. Fundamentally, there exists a need for social workers to
educate themselves as to the nature of this social experiment which
New Labour has embarked upon. It challenges social workers to be
aware…This is an interesting and at times challenging book,
reiterating the history and roots of current ideology within
government...The work is grounded in a contemporary context of social
services and social work practice, challenging the withdrawal of
social work behind a barrier of `managerialism, budget control, form
filling…into office based assessment and rationing′… Finally, it
offers a satisfying critique to the dominant `hegemonic′ of
`evidence-based practice′, arguing for research at the level of
means rather than the technical… Jordan similarly argues in his
conclusion that all of the government white papers, guidelines, etc.
indicate a lack of clarity of purpose and method social work should
retain its belief in ′a human and creative activity… which engages
with people′s emotions… as well as their rights and obligations′
- British Journal of Social Work The New Labour government in the UK
is committed to a programme of reform of the welfare state that will
pull away safety nets and replace them by trampolines, to bounce
citizens back into active participation. Its regime of ′tough
love′ will make more demands on those claiming benefits and
services, as well as clamping down on dependencey, fraud and crime.
This will be done by changing the culture of welfare agencies, towards
promoting achievement and independence, as well as meeting ′genuine
need′. In Social Work and the Third Way, Bill Jordan provides an
accessible and lively analysis of the tensions between ′toughness′
and ′love′ in the Third Way′s political philosophy, and the
problems of implementing New Labour′s programme. He looks at the
government′s reliance on face-to-face methods for activating
citizens and changing their behaviour in many of its initiatives. On
the one hand, New Labour places a surprising amount of faith in the
ability of counsellors and advisers to bring about the changes it
requires; yet it is highly suspicious of the public sector in general,
and local authorities in particular, as part of the ′forces of
conservatism′ in the UK. Hence it spawns new agencies and projects,
often with a strong enforcement ethos, and regulates the whole
implementation process through strict top-down surveillance. In all
this, professional social work, and local authority social services,
are relegated to a tightly circumscribed role in social care. The
author argues for a new, more generous and expansive approach to
practice, which can do justice to the challenges of change under New
Labour′s regime and in doing so Social Work and the Third Way
provides an important and topical contribution to the debate on the
future of the Welfare State and will be essential reading for students
and researchers in social work, social policy and politics.
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Tough Love as Social Policy
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780857022264
Publisert
2019
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
SAGE Publications, Ltd. (UK)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter