Find a Way or Make One: A Documentary History of Clark Atlanta University Whitney M. Young Jr. School of Social Work (1920-2020)
Autor Alma J. Cartenen Limba Engleză Hardback – 16 noi 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197518465
ISBN-10: 019751846X
Pagini: 468
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 019751846X
Pagini: 468
Dimensiuni: 236 x 155 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
There is both a lack of knowledge and acknowledgement of the important contributions of Black social workers. This historical account is needed to better understand contemporary social welfare philosophies and theoretical frameworks that inform our practice and scholarship. It affirms the extraordinary commitment of Black pioneer social workers in their quest for social justice. Carten's discussions of the historical treasures from those who established the school and laid the foundation for its success is very intriguing, and I was intellectually stimulated and reaffirmed by everything revealed about the relationships and networks that existed during the early periods of our history.
Dr. Carten offers persuasive evidence for the need to focus on race.... If what our society seeks is true pluralism, then the need for people of color to create and sustain institutions that protect and advance their cultural particularity is essential. Otherwise, we will continue to go down the road of Eurocentric cultural oppression and universalism. Dr. Carten's analysis of the Atlanta School gives us a historical and contemporary justification for an oppressed group to institutionalize its unique contributions to the improvement of humanity.
Find a Way or Make One critically examines the development of America's oldest school of social work founded in 1920 for and by black Americans, the Whitney M. Young Jr. School of Social Work at Clark Atlanta University. As a masterful social historian, Dr. Alma Carten places the School's development into the context of a century of American socioeconomic, political, and cultural history, marked by the lingering effects of race-based inequalities rooted in doctrines of Eurocentric white supremacy. Dr. Carten's tour de force is a significant contribution to the literature, providing insight into historical developments in social welfare policy and education from a race-critical, Afrocentric perspective.
Alma Carten was a student of my father, Whitney M. Young, Jr., and has been a longtime friend. She has advocated for many years for this book about the Atlanta University School of Social Work, where my father was a longtime dean. She captures the path that he took, from lifting up the School which now bears his name to the way that he lifted up both the work and the need for not only social workers but people of color in the profession. It is an exceptional piece of historical research and at the same time lovingly done. And it is timely.
Susan C. Mapp unpacks thorny ethical dilemmas for social workers in practical and helpful ways in this book, making this is an excellent introduction for social work students to the world of international social work.
By bringing forward uncomfortable topics, Susan C. Mapp inspires readers to critically engage with and act on current social issues. This is a rich, comprehensive, timely, and engaging book on the complexities of global social issues and human rights.
This text will open the world to social work students through its insightful and humane discussion of human rights and social development.
Dr. Carten offers persuasive evidence for the need to focus on race.... If what our society seeks is true pluralism, then the need for people of color to create and sustain institutions that protect and advance their cultural particularity is essential. Otherwise, we will continue to go down the road of Eurocentric cultural oppression and universalism. Dr. Carten's analysis of the Atlanta School gives us a historical and contemporary justification for an oppressed group to institutionalize its unique contributions to the improvement of humanity.
Find a Way or Make One critically examines the development of America's oldest school of social work founded in 1920 for and by black Americans, the Whitney M. Young Jr. School of Social Work at Clark Atlanta University. As a masterful social historian, Dr. Alma Carten places the School's development into the context of a century of American socioeconomic, political, and cultural history, marked by the lingering effects of race-based inequalities rooted in doctrines of Eurocentric white supremacy. Dr. Carten's tour de force is a significant contribution to the literature, providing insight into historical developments in social welfare policy and education from a race-critical, Afrocentric perspective.
Alma Carten was a student of my father, Whitney M. Young, Jr., and has been a longtime friend. She has advocated for many years for this book about the Atlanta University School of Social Work, where my father was a longtime dean. She captures the path that he took, from lifting up the School which now bears his name to the way that he lifted up both the work and the need for not only social workers but people of color in the profession. It is an exceptional piece of historical research and at the same time lovingly done. And it is timely.
Susan C. Mapp unpacks thorny ethical dilemmas for social workers in practical and helpful ways in this book, making this is an excellent introduction for social work students to the world of international social work.
By bringing forward uncomfortable topics, Susan C. Mapp inspires readers to critically engage with and act on current social issues. This is a rich, comprehensive, timely, and engaging book on the complexities of global social issues and human rights.
This text will open the world to social work students through its insightful and humane discussion of human rights and social development.
Notă biografică
Alma J. Carten, PhD, LCSW, ACSW, is a 1964 alumni of Atlanta University School of Social Work and has spent over 25 years as a faculty member at New York University Silver School of Social Work where her scholarship has focused on racial inequities impacting families of color. She is a recipient of the School's Dorothy Height Humanitarian Award, the NIH Mental Health Fellowship, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the New York State Social Work Education Association, and the Council on Social Work Education Minority Fellowship Award.