Details

A History of the Personal Social Services in England


A History of the Personal Social Services in England

Feast, Famine and the Future

von: Ray Jones

CHF 35.50

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 04.07.2020
ISBN/EAN: 9783030461232
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<div><p>This book provides a detailed narrative and analysis of the 50-year development of the personal social services in England, located throughout the changing ideological, political and relevant professional contexts of the period. </p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>Drawing on the experience and recollections of key players who were active during major moments, it constitutes a significant addition to the social work and social policy literature, synthesising important and often original evidence, and some provocative interpretations. The book speaks to crucial on-going issues and contentious current debates, such as the place of bureaucratic management structures in ‘practices with people' generally, and social work specifically. </p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>

<p>It will be of interest to student and qualified social workers, social policy students and researchers, and policy makers, as well as those with a general interest in the history and trajectory of current issues facing social work and social care in England.</p><i></i></div>
<p>1 Introduction: History and Hints.- Part I Creating the Personal Social Services.- 2 Seizing &nbsp;the Moment: The Seebohm Committee.- 3 Scripting the Future: The Seebohm Report.- 4 Preparing the Platform: The Local Authority Social Services Bill and Act.- Part II The Personal Social Services in Action.- 5 Creating the Empires: Promise and Potential (1970–1976).- 6 The Seismic Shifts of the Mid-1970s.- 7 Norming and Storming: Social Work Debates and Developments in the 1970s.- 8 Thatcher and Threat (1979–1989).- Part III New Laws and New Horizons.- 9 A Drama in Two Parts: Part I—The 1989 Children Act and Children’s Social Services.- 10 A Drama in Two Parts: Part II—The 1990 NHS and Community Care Act and Adult Social Services and Social Work.- Part IV The Recent Reforms and Unravelling.- 11 New Labour: New Agendas (1997–2010).- 12 Coalition and Conservatives: Austerity and Hostility (2010–2020).- Part V Reflecting and Re-routing.- 13 The Personal Social Services Today and Tomorrow.</p>
<p>Ray Jones is Emeritus Professor of Social Work at Kingston University and St. George’s, University of London, and a registered social worker. He has been a director of social services, chief executive of the Social Care Institute for Excellence, and Deputy Chair and Chair of the British Association of Social Workers. In 2018 he received the Social Worker of the Year award for ‘Outstanding Contribution to Social Work.’</p>
<p>&nbsp;"This book presents a wealth of highly relevant detail which, far from obscuring them, serves to illuminate underlying trends and directions of travel. It is enlivened by quotations from the interviews the author conducted with people who played significant parts in key developments, and looks set to become the definitive history of the personal social services.” —&nbsp;Keith Bilton, co-founder Social Work History Network</p><p>“Packed with meticulously researched detail and contemporary voices, this account by an author who has lived through the ups and downs of social services development makes for a highly readable story.” —June Thoburn CBE, Emeritus Professor of Social Work, University of East Anglia</p><p>“A truly unique, detailed and personal account of the development of the personal social services and significant milestones encountered from Seebohm, through the Thatcherite years to current day debates about privatisation. This book documents an important period in the history of social work and will continue to be of great value to both students of social work and social policy now and in years to come.” —Louise Brown, Professor of International Social Work and Innovation, University of Bath</p><p> </p><p><b>"This is a fascinating and instructive read. Ray's access to so many key people, and the blend of his analysis and their candid thoughts, paints a great picture of aspiration in public service whilst also detailing the destructive power of short-term thinking and political expediency." </b>—<b>Andrew Webb, Former President of the Association of Directors of Children's Services</b></p><p>This book provides a detailed narrative and analysis of the 50-year development of the personal social services in England, located throughout the changing ideological, political and relevant professional contexts of the period.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Drawing on the experience and recollections of key players who were active during major moments, it constitutes a significant addition to the social work and social policy literature, synthesising important and often original evidence, and some provocative interpretations. The book speaks to crucial on-going issues and contentious current debates, such as the place of bureaucratic management structures in ‘practices with people' generally, and social work specifically.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>It will be of interest to student and qualified social workers, social policy students and researchers, and policy makers, as well as those with a general interest in the history and trajectory of current issues facing social work and social care in England.</p>
<p>Based on over 30 interviews , as well as key papers, reports and texts published over the past 50 years</p><p>Contains ‘insider’ information and insights provided by interviews with 30 individuals, including some service users, directly involved in the past development and implementation of policy and practice</p><p>Written in a clear and straightforward manner and references the author’s own work experience, making it accessible, contextualising some of the more theoretical and analytical material</p><p>Published in the year that marks the 50th anniversary of the advent of an integrated profession of social work in England and UK, a unified professional association for social workers, and the creation of local authority social services</p>
<div><p>"This book looks set to become the definitive history of the personal social services, that fifth social service which was left out of the post-war Labour government's invention of the welfare state, and whose genesis in England and Wales was the Seebohm Report of 1968 and the 1970 Local Authority Social Services Act. (Scotland's more ambitious and earlier developments were set out in the 1966 White Paper Social Work and the Community and the Social Work (Scotland) Act of 1968.)&nbsp;The book presents a wealth of highly relevant detail which, far from obscuring them, serves to illuminate underlying trends and directions of travel. It is enlivened by quotations from the interviews the author conducted with people who played significant parts in key developments.” —&nbsp;Keith Bilton, co-founder Social Work History Network, UK</p>

<p>“Packed with meticulously researched detail and contemporary voices, this account by an author who has lived through the ups and downs of social services development makes for a highly readable story. Whether you dip in to check a detail, or read as am insightful historical document, you won’t be disappointed.” —June Thoburn CBE, Emeritus Professor of Social Work, University of East Anglia</p>

<p>“A truly unique, detailed and personal account of the development of the personal social services and significant milestones encountered from Seebohm, through the Thatcherite years to current day debates about privatisation. This book documents an important period in the history of social work and will continue to be of great value to both students of social work and social policy now and in years to come.” —Louise Brown, Professor of International Social Work and Innovation, University of Bath</p>

<p><b>"This is a fascinating and instructive read. Ray's access to so many key people, and the blend of his analysis and their candid thoughts, paints a great picture of aspiration in public service whilst also detailing the destructive power of short-term thinking and political expediency." </b>—<b>Andrew Webb, Former President of the Association of Directors of Children's Services</b></p><br></div>

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