Understanding Social Welfare: A Search for Social Justice by Ralph Dolgoff, Donald Feldstein

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(Hardcover - New Edition)

  • Pub. Date: January 2009
  • 464pp
  • Sales Rank: 280,262
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2009
    • Publisher: Allyn & Bacon, Inc.
    • Format: Hardcover, 464pp
    • Sales Rank: 280,262

    Synopsis

    This readable, well-organized, comprehensive, and scholarly text is accessible to social work students and helps them learn about, understand, analyze, and evaluate social welfare policies and programs.

    The text focuses on the impact of social structure on people’s lives, emphasizing human rights and the search for social justice based on the current concerns of a diverse client population, and incorporating the latest contextual factors and social welfare legislation.

    What Reviewers Are Saying

    “The approach [of Understanding Social Welfare] is among the best. . . . I would not use another text.”
    –George T. Patterson, New York University

    “I consider it a great strength that this text incorporates the diversity component throughout the text, which is so essential to the social work curriculum. . . . An awareness of this diversity affords the student a valuable perspective and a broader context to evaluate our own state of social policy.”
    –Sheli Bernstein-Goff, West Liberty State College

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    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    Welfare propaganda or Welfare solutions?by pbr

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    September 21, 2009: Welfare is but another method to describe the process by which society attempts to accommodate business when commerce ignores fundamentals of family oriented society.

    Welfare is not given for couples; only for families.

    The need for welfare arises when both parents must work (usually a class based prerogative), and no one is available in the home to care for children. What to do with the children is the question this book attempts to answer, and the government and religious based initiatives offered as the answer are woefully inefficient, and at some point, insanely optimistic that any form of financial payment can replace what a family can produce by itself in the form of child care. Paying parental substitutes is much like paying parental prostitutes. One gets what one pays for, and it matters little whether they are government initiated or religion initiated.

    Failing to recognize that there are no real substitutes worthy of replacing parents, the book never questions whether parents rights have been abrogated in favor of the much debated public policy child welfare solution. A society who has lost its identity and doesn't know who it is may not be the reliable source for providing solutions - is the take away from the book, as usual.