Description:
This book is written in the belief that human rights are important,
and that they are particularly important for those in the human service
professions in general, and for social workers in particular. By framing
social work specifically as a human rights profession, many of the issues
and dilemmas that face social work can be looked at in a new light. Further,
human rights can provide social workers with a moral basis for their practice,
both at the level of day-to-day work with ‘clients’, and also in community
development and in policy advocacy and activism; indeed a human rights
perspective can help to link these varying roles into a unified and holistic
view of social work practice. This book seeks to articulate what it means
to say that social work is a human rights profession, and to consider the
implications of such a perspective for the practice of social work.