Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I. Foundations of Social Welfare Policy
1. Social Work and Social Policy: A Sustainability Framework
Definitions and Standards
The Welfare State in the Face of Challenges
Challenges to Social Welfare: Power, Exploitation, and Unintended
Consequences
Social Welfare Policy and Social Work
2. Historical Foundations of Social Welfare Policy
Feudalism and the Rise of Capitalism
The American Experience: “Exceptionalism” and Its Discontents
The Civil War and Its Aftermath
The Progressive Era (1900 to World War I)
The Mid-20th Century: The Great Depression, the New Deal, and
Beyond
The Backlash: Late 20th Century and the Modern Era
3. Purpose and Structure of Social Welfare Policy
The Religious Underpinnings of Social Welfare
The Practical Application of Values
American Exceptionalism and the Corporation
4. Environmental Sustainability and the Social Work Profession
A Brief Eco History
The Planet in Crisis: The Scope of Environmental Loss and
Damage
Food, Water, and Population Growth
Modern Agriculture and the Loss of Biodiversity
The Promise of Social Work
Social Welfare Policy Considerations
5. Poverty and Inequality by Suzanne McDevitt
Poverty and Inequality in the 21st Century
Defining and Measuring Poverty
6. Minority Groups and the Impact of Oppression
Oppression
Systemic Examples of Oppression
Progress and Backlash
Culturally Competent Social Work Practice
Part II. Policies to Meet Human Needs
7. Child Welfare
The Convention on the Rights of the Child
The CRC in Practice
8. Sustainable Health Care Policies
History of U.S. Health Care Reform
The Affordable Care Act
Disability Policy
Global Perspectives on Health Policy
9. Mental Health Care Policy
Mental Health Issues: Definitions and Challenges
Historical Views of Mental Health and Illness
Social Aspects of Mental Illness
Social Programs for Better Mental Health
Trauma and the Social Work Response
10. Sustainable Policy for Older Adults by Christina L.
Erickson
Aging Worldwide: An Overview
The Development of Programs for Older Americans
Older Adults in Society
Housing and Long-Term Care
Sustainable Policy for Older Adults: An Intergenerational
Approach
11. Human Rights
Immediate Threats to Human Rights: War and Guns
The United Nations and Universal Human Rights
The Role of Social Work in Human Rights
12. Sustainability Policy Analysis and Policy Practice
Defining Policy Analysis
How Are Social Policies Made?
Sustainability and Policy
Progressive Policy Analysis for a Sustainable Future
From Policy Analysis to Policy Practice
Ethical Issues Relevant to Social Change Efforts
Drawing on Our Social Work Imagination
Appendix A: Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Appendix B: Relevant Internet Sites
Index
About the Authors
About the Contributors
Katherine S. van Wormer, MSSW, PhD, is professor of social work at
the University of Northern Iowa. Her PhD is in sociology from the
University of Georgia. Uniquely in the 1960s, van Wormer
participated in two civil rights movements—one in North Carolina
and one in Northern Ireland, where she taught English for several
years. In the late 1980s, she moved to Norway for two years to
practice alcoholism counseling. Dr. van Wormer has authored or
co-authored over 20 books and 60 articles. Among the recent books
she has authored or co-authored are Death by Domestic Violence:
Preventing the Murders and the Murder-Suicides (2009, Praeger);
Working with Female Offenders: A Gender-Sensitive Approach, (2010,
Wiley & Sons); two volumes of Human Behavior and the Social
Environment, Micro and Macro Levels, Second Edition (2011, Oxford
University Press); and Addiction Treatment: A Strengths
Perspective, Third Edition (2012, Cengage). Her most recent books
are Restorative Justice Today (2012, SAGE) and Women and the
Criminal Justice System, Fourth Edition (2014, Pearson). Dr. van
Wormer and her co-author have done numerous speaking engagements
related to their 2012 book, The Maid Narratives: African
American Domestic Workers and their Employers in the Jim Crow South
(LSU Press).
Rosemary J. Link, PhD, LISW received her undergraduate honors
degree in modern history and politics with sociology from the
University of Southampton and her postgraduate diploma in applied
social studies from the University of London. After ten years as a
school social worker then educational administrator, Dr. Link
attended the University of Minnesota for her PhD in social work
with a special interest in children’s rights and social policy. Dr.
Link served as a professor of social work and dean of graduate
studies at Augsburg College where she assisted in building the MA
in leadership and gaining the accreditation of the MSW and nursing
programs. Dr. Link is currently associate vice president for
Academic Affairs at Simpson College, Iowa where she is primarily
responsible for building undergraduate and graduate programs for
adult learners. In addition to administration, Dr. Link has chaired
the Board of Southside Family Nurturing Center for six years
(2003-2009) and she has ongoing research interest in children’s
wellbeing and human rights. She has served as external examiner to
the University of the West Indies at Mona, Jamaica and the
University of Bharathair, Coimbatore. Dr Link has published
numerous articles related to child poverty, human rights and social
development, plus five books, including: a study of child poverty
together with Dr. Anthony Bibus, titled “When Children Pay”; a
textbook in human behavior together with co-author Dr Chathapuram
Ramanathan, titled All Our Futures; a curriculum design text
together with Dr. Lynne Healy, Models of International Curriculum
in Social Work; and co-editor of the Handbook for International
Social Work and Human Rights. In 2005-2006, Dr. Link received a
state department grant to serve as an educational ambassador in
Slovenia, India, and Singapore.
A text with both critical thinking and sustainability focus.
*Stephanie Warnecke Adams, Eastern Kentucky University*
[Van Wormer and Link] provide a timely examination of the impact of
globalization on the social welfare state and conclude with a
powerful section linking policy analysis to practice. I highly
recommend this book for BSW and MSW programs seeking to
significantly integrate sustainability content into their policy
courses.
*W. Jay Gabbard, Western Kentucky University*
This excellent book is very relevant to twenty-first century social
welfare policy. I highly recommend it.
*John Graham, Florida Atlantic University*
Dr. van Wormer and Dr. Link have written the book those of us
concerned with sustainable global policy have been longing to find.
They present an inspiration, challenging the social work
imagination to find creative solutions for sustainable future
policymaking.
*Dr. Marta Vides Saade, Ramapo College of New Jersey*
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