Gender Reclaimed: Women in Social WorkHale & Iremonger, 1986 - 264 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 17
Página 168
... cent or three of the agencies had women represented equally with men on the manage- ment committee and no agencies ... cent of agencies say they use mainly women , while 22 per cent of agen- cies did not use volunteers at all . Reasons ...
... cent or three of the agencies had women represented equally with men on the manage- ment committee and no agencies ... cent of agencies say they use mainly women , while 22 per cent of agen- cies did not use volunteers at all . Reasons ...
Página 217
... cent ) would be a tilted group , while a balanced group would be approxi- mately 50 per cent in each category . First described by Kanter ( 1977a , 1977b ) with regard to women , the existence of negative group experiences for female ...
... cent ) would be a tilted group , while a balanced group would be approxi- mately 50 per cent in each category . First described by Kanter ( 1977a , 1977b ) with regard to women , the existence of negative group experiences for female ...
Página 226
... cent women ; 47.8 per cent men ) . This represents an imbalance compared to the overall gender distribution in the profession quoted above ( 64 per cent female ) . Furthermore , there is a differential gender pattern with men over ...
... cent women ; 47.8 per cent men ) . This represents an imbalance compared to the overall gender distribution in the profession quoted above ( 64 per cent female ) . Furthermore , there is a differential gender pattern with men over ...
Contenido
Tables and Figures | 7 |
Gender Systems Thinking and Radical Social Work | 14 |
Feminist Theory and Social Work | 33 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 10 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
action agencies approach argued assumptions Australian behaviour biological capitalism capitalist casework chapter child client concept concern conflict context critical domestic violence dominant economic Eisenstein emphasis ethnic welfare example experience family therapy female feminism feminist perspective feminist research feminist theory focus foster care foster mother functions Galper gender husband ideology implications individual inequalities issues Kirsty labour Lisa lives male Marxist Marxist feminism ment natural mother needs nuclear family nurturing organisation parents patriarchy political position of women problems professional programmes question radical feminism radical feminists radical social recognise reinforce relation relationships responsibility role seen self-help sexism sexual situation social work education social work practice social workers socialist socialist feminism South Wales status strategies structural suggests Sydney systems theory systems thinking theoretical therapist tion traditional volunteers welfare services woman women's oppression women's studies