Routledge Handbook of Green Social Work

Routledge Handbook of Green Social Work

Dominelli, Lena

Taylor & Francis Ltd

04/2018

628

Dura

Inglês

9781138740792

15 a 20 dias

1247

Descrição não disponível.
List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Foreword: Green Social Work, a New Direction for Social Work (Lena Dominelli); Introduction: Why Green Social Work (Lena Dominelli, Bala Raju Nikki and Hok Bun Ku); Part I. Green Social Work Theory; Scene Setting Section; Chapter 1: Green Social Work: Reconfiguring the Environmental Landscape in Social Work as a Transdisciplinary Endeavour (Lena Dominelli); Chapter 2: Transdisciplinary Collaboration between Physical and Social Scientists: Drawing on the Experiences of an Advisor to Earthquakes without Frontiers (EwF) (Peter Sammonds); Chapter 3: Disasters, Health Impacts and the Value of Implementing the 'Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction, 2015-2030' (Virginia Murray, Lorcan Clarke and Rishma Maini); Theory into Practice Section; Chapter 4: Work in Disasters: Experiences in the United Kingdom (David N Jones); Chapter 5: Rebuilding Lives Post-Disaster: Innovative Community Practices for Sustainable Development (Julie Drolet, Haorui Wu, Robin Ersing, Margaret Alston, Desley Hargreaves, Yenyi Huang, Chao Hsing Huang and Golam Mathbor); Chapter 6: Green Social Work for Environmental Justice: Implications for International Social Workers (Meredith C.F. Powers, Jennifer Willett, John Mathias, and Anna Hayward); Part II. Natural Disasters; Chapter 7: Promoting Public Interest Design: The transformative change toward green social work during post-Ya'an earthquake reconstruction and recovery in Sichuan China (Haorui Wu); Chapter 8: Developing Community Solidarity in the Context of an Earthquake Disaster; (Rosemary A. Barbera); Chapter 9: A Social Work Response to Himalayan Disasters: Insights from Green Social; (Bala Raju Nikku); Chapter 10: Dissecting a Himalayan Disaster, Finding Pathways (Adusumalli Malathi and Soumya Dutta); Chapter 11: A Post-Morakot Environmentally-Friendly Reconstruction Solution: Reflections from a Green Social Work Perspective (Yen Yi Huang, Chiau Hong Chen, Shu Ching Chang and Shu Yuan Hsiao); Chapter 12: Dominica - Tropical Storm Erika and its Impacts (Letnie Rock and Debra D. Joseph with Ayodele Harper); Part III: Green Agricultural Practices; Chapter 13: Negotiating Resilient Communities: Para-Social Work Practice in a Participatory Small Watershed Management Programme in China's Tourism City (Luk Tak Chuen); Chapter 14: Reflections on a Tribal Kitchen Project: A Case Study about Green Social Work in Taiwan (Ying-Hao Huang); Chapter 15: Community Gardening: The Nexus for Community, Social Work and University Collaboration (Robin Mama); Part IV. Food (In)Security; Chapter 16: Food Insecurity: Where Social Injustice Meets Environmental Exploitation; (Cheryl Molle); Chapter 17: Food Security Crisis and CAS Movement in China: a Case Study in Yunnan Province, PRC (Hok Bun Ku and Hairong Yan) Part V. (Hu)man-Made Disasters; Chapter 18: Environmental Issues and Controversies in Latin America: A Challenge to Social Work (Nilsa Burgos Ortiz); Climate Change Driven Disasters Section; Chapter 19: Green Social Work requires a Green Politics or Climate Change is Capital Change (Carolyn Noble); Chapter 20: Green Social Work within Integrated Coastal Zone Management: Mauritius and Barbados (Komalsingh Rambaree and Letnie Rock); Chapter 21: Social Protection Options for Farmers in the Face of Climate Change: A case study of women farmers and agriculture in Goromonzi, Zimbabwe (Mildred T. Mushunje, Vishanthie Sewpaul); Chapter 22: Climate Change, Vulnerability and Just Adaptation: Re-imagining Social Work Practice in the Indian Context (Sunil D. Santha, Sowmya Balasubramaniam, Anup Shenai, Asha Banu Soletti, Sharvan Verma, Jaydip Solanki, Rupali Gaikawad); Part VI. Extreme Weather Events; Chapter 23: The 2015 Chennai Flood: Green Social Work, an Emerging Model for Practice in India (Miriam Samuel, Prince Annadurai and Sowndarya Sankarakrishnan); Chapter 24: Mitigating the Impact of Drought in Namibia: Implications for Social Work Policy, Education and Practice (Peggie Chiwara and Antoinette Lombard); Part VII. Disaster Driven Migration; Chapter 25: Understanding Poverty through the Experiences of Women who are Forced Migrants: Considerations for a Social Work Response (Mehmoona Moosa-Mitha, Feinula Bhanji and Fariyal Ross-Sheriff); Chapter 26: Positioning Social Workers Without Borders Within Green Social Work: Ethical Considerations for Social Work as Social Justice Work (Luren Wroe, Bridget Ng'andu, Mathew Doyle and Lynn King); Part VIII. Health Disasters; Chapter 27: Intersectionality in Health Pandemics (Susan A. Taylor); Chapter 28: The Arrival of Chikungunya on the Caribbean Island of Curacao: The Important Roles of Social Workers (Odette van Brummen-Girigori and Auronette Girigori); Chapter 29: The Challenge of Maintaining Continuity in Health and Social Care During Extreme Weather Events: Cross Sectoral and Transdisciplinary Approaches (Sarah Curtis, Lena Dominelli, Katie J. Oven, Jonathan Wistow); Part IX. Industrial and Urban Issues; Chapter 30: Sowing Seeds: Introducing Green Social Work in Sri Lanka (Yasmin Perera); Chapter 31: Ecological Hazards of Nuclear Waste Disposal between Aspiration and Economic Prosperity and Community Sustainability: Lessons for social work in a small Croatian municipality (Nino Zganec and Ana Miljenovic Opacic); Chapter 32: Integrating Green Social Work and the U.S. Environmental Justice Movement: An Introduction to Community Benefits Agreements (Amy Krings and Hillary Thomas); Part X. Practicing Green Social Work; Chapter 33: Historical Trends in Calls to Action: Climate Change, Pro-Environmental Behaviours and Green Social Work (Erin Kennedy); Chapter 34: Community resistance and resilience following an environmental disaster in Aotearoa/New Zealand (Sonya Hunt, Kelly Smith, Rebecca Sargisson, and Heather Hamerton); Chapter 35: Human-made Disasters and Social Work: A Ukrainian Prospective (Tetyana Semigina); Chapter 36: Strategies Used by Activists in Israeli Environmental Struggles: Implications for the Future Green Social Worker (Ariella Cwikel and Edith Blit-Cohen); Chapter 37: Working with Children in Disasters (Ines Danao); Chapter 38: Persons with Disabilities and the Great East Japan Earthquake (Shigeo Tatsuki); Chapter 39: Social Work and Terrorism: Voices of Experience (Marilyn Callahan); Chapter 40: Personal Reflections on the Prevent Programme (Neil Denton and Kate Cochrane); Chapter 41: Reflecting on the Earthquake, Tread Carefully (Hanna Ruszczyk); Part XI. Education; Chapter 42: Making Connections with Survivors of a Catastrophic Flood in West Virginia: A Green Social Work Approach to Climate Change Adaptation (Willette F. Stinson and Larry D. Williams); Chapter 43: Towards a Curriculum in Disaster Risk Reduction from a Sustainability Perspective (Carin Caudra and Gu?ny Bjoerk Eydal); Chapter 44: Greening Social Work Education in Aotearoa/New Zealand (Lynsey Ellis, Ksenija Napan and Kieran O'Donoghue); Chapter 45: Greening Australian Social Work Practice and Education (Sharlene Nipperess and Jennifer Boddy); Chapter 46: Greening Social Work Education: Transforming the Curriculum in Pursuit of Eco-social Justice(Peter Jones); Conclusion: Towards a Green Society and Mainstreaming Green Social Work in Social Work Education and Practice (Lena Dominelli, Balaraju Nikku and Hok Bun Ku); Index
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Green Social Work;Community Based Disaster Risk Reduction;Social Work;Green Social Work Practice;Disaster Risk Reduction;Green Social Work Model;Environmental Issues;Social Work Education;Green Social;Sendai Framework;Social Work Curricula;Disaster Social Work;Social Work Practice;Disaster Risk;Young Men;Socio-economic Development;Ecological Social Work;Social Work Repertoire;Social Work Intervention;Australian Social Work;Food Insecurity;Gorkha Earthquake;Transdisciplinary Research;Indigenous Social Work;Lena Dominelli