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Vol. 37 No. 1 (2025)
Vol. 37 No. 1 (2025)
Published:
2025-03-07
Full Issue
PDF
Editorial
Animals and Social Work
Nik Taylor, Carole Adamson, Bindi Bennett, Heather Fraser
1-6
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Commentary
Full of hope: Poverty, social work and social services in the world we live in
Mike O’Brien
7-13
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Original Articles
Horses supporting the social inclusion of young people with disabilities: A case study from Ireland.
Rebecca Conway, Tara Barrett
14-26
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She likes animals: The construction of veganism, a feminist analysis.
Angella Duvnjak
27–38
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Challenging anthropocentrism and speciesism in social work education
Jasmine Tiffany Ferreira, Atsuko Matsuoka
39–55
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Animal-assisted social work at Flash Farm
Helen Hickson, Kristy Kemp, Natasha Long, Hayley Sherry
56–69
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Closing the “PAWS” gap through pet-inclusive social work training and practice: Professional responses that incorporate human–animal relationships
Phil Arkow, Janet Hoy-Gerlach
70–82
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Exploring the role of pets in social work research: Enhancing qualitative methods through the researcher-participant-pet dynamic
David Betts, Annika Herb
83–95
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Brushtail possums and species-inclusive social work in Aotearoa New Zealand
Emily Major
96–108
PDF
Dogs in schools:
Dogs Connect as an example of a dogs-first wellbeing dog programme
Erin Jones, Grant Shannon
109–120
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Social work, women, animal protection and intersectional feminism:
Making the connections
Nik Taylor, Heather Fraser
121–130
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Transition into social work practice: Experiences of newly qualified Māori social workers
Santana Lynette Williams, Jeanette Louise Hastie
131–141
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Family environment of children with specific learning disabilities:
Implications of parent-mediated home interventions in family-centred social work practice
Christina Francis, P. M. Mathew
142–156
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Research Briefs
Companion animals, poverty and social work
Lesley Pitt
157–162
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“The workers are usually really heartbroken”:
Interspecies practice as a site of moral distress
Melissa Ann Laing
163–170
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Viewpoints
Dogs:
Teachers of what matters, in social work and in life
Ksenija Napan
171–178
PDF
Care farms, social work and animals: A cautionary tale
Kathryn Lelliott
179–183
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