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Vol. 29 No. 2 (2017): Special issue
Vol. 29 No. 2 (2017): Special issue
The renaissance of critical and radical social work?
Published:
2017-07-26
Full Issue
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Editorial
Editorial: Is there a renaissance of radical social work?
Fraser Heather, Liz Beddoe, Neil Ballantyne
1-5
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Original Articles
Rising wealth and income inequality in Australia and New Zealand: A radical social work critique and response
Christine Morley, Phillip Ablett
6-18
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Radical practice in a risk-averse environment: Learning from ATD Fourth World UK
Hannah Blumhardt, ATD Fourth World UK, Anna Gupta
19-33
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Reshaping political ideology in social work: A critical perspective
Filipe Duarte
34-44
PDF
The renaissance will not be televised
Angelika Papadopoulos
45-55
PDF
Critical Language Awareness: A beckoning frontier in social work education?
Clement Mapfumo Chihota
56-68
PDF
“What’s his is his and what’s mine is his”: Financial power and economic abuse in Aotearoa
Ang Jury, Natalie Thorburn, Ruth Weatherall
69-82
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A qualitative exploration of the unique challenges facing older men with haemophilia and the implications for social work practice
Sarah Eleanor Elliott, Kelsey L Deane, Barbara Staniforth
83-95
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Hospitals and cultural diversity: social worker experiences and reflections
Doris Anne Testa
96-107
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Educating on anti-oppressive practice with gender and sexual minority elders: Nursing and social work perspectives
Margaret Pack, Peter Brown
108-118
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Primary health care social work in Aotearoa New Zealand: An exploratory investigation
Stefanie Dobl, Liz Beddoe, Peter Huggard
119-130
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Commentary
The new social work radicalism
Iain Ferguson
131-132
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Revitalising radical social work
Linda Briskman
133-136
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Viewpoints
Competent solidarity: the alternative for professional social work
Alastair Russell
137-144
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Book Reviews
Australia’s welfare wars: The players, the politics and the ideologies
Philip Mendes
145-148
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Expanding the conversation: International Indigenous social workers’ insights into the use of Indigenist knowledge and theory in practice
Christine Fejo-King, Peter Mataira
149-150
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Blinded by science: The social implications of epigenetics and neuroscience
David Wastell, Susan White
151-153
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The Alternative
Lisa Nandy, Caroline Lucas, Chris Bowers
154-155
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Practising critical reflection to develop emancipatory change
Christine Morley
156-157
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