Hybrid Social Work
Hybrid Social Work
Contested Knowledge, Fragile Collaboration and Social Citizenship
Harslof, Ivan; Innvaer, Simon; Bode, Ingo; Jenssen, Dag; Bekken, Wenche
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
04/2025
280
Dura
Inglês
9781035327201
Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição
Descrição não disponível.
Contents
Preface xii
1 Evolving hybrid worlds of social work 1
Ingo Bode, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken and
Ivan Harslof
PART I Contested knowledge - epistemological foundations of
hybrid social work
2 The epistemic culture of hybrid social work: insights from
organisational settings in Germany and Norway 21
Dag Jenssen, Ingo Bode and Robin Lenz
3 Awakening our epistemic consciousness: Re-thinking
interprofessional health social work 46
Hannah Cootes
4 The importance of 'system knowledge' among Norwegian
social workers in host settings 67
Ivan Harslof
PART II Medicalization and hybrid interventions
5 'Not prioritized, but very important': social work captured in
medical and psychological reasoning 85
Wenche Bekken
6 Social nursing in Denmark: a specialized response to
vulnerability in healthcare 104
Anette Lykke Hindhede, Ingrid Poulsen and Jonas Debesay
7 In the absence of social workers at Danish somatic hospitals:
the social dimension in the social nurse function 119
Karin Hojbjerg, Emilie Marie Andres, Christian Ildrup
Gadgaard, Carsten Juul Jensen and Heidi Lene Myglegaard Andersen
8 The libra of institutional logics: Theorizing hybrid structures
in human service organizations in the field of disability 136
Jens Ineland and Faten Nouf
PART III Interprofessional collaboration
9 Three logics of acculturation on social workers' perceptions
of their interprofessional teamwork 158
Simon Innvaer and Henriette Lund Skyberg
10 'You should do what you're good at': boundary work in
interprofessional teams 174
Sylvie van Dam and Peter Raeymaeckers
PART IV The interface with other organizations
11 Complementary roles or multiple idiosyncrasy?: Patchwork
collaboration in local action against homelessness in Germany 192
Ingo Bode and Moritz Bachmann
12 Between transaction and hybridization: French human service
professionals dealing with multiple logics of action 209
Philippe Lyet
13 Value conflicts: how US social workers manage the ethics of
outsider practice 224
Corey S. Shdaimah, Lauren P. McCarthy, Rachel Imboden
and Patrice Forrester
14 Conclusion to Hybrid Social Work 242
Ivan Harslof, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken
and Ingo Bode
Preface xii
1 Evolving hybrid worlds of social work 1
Ingo Bode, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken and
Ivan Harslof
PART I Contested knowledge - epistemological foundations of
hybrid social work
2 The epistemic culture of hybrid social work: insights from
organisational settings in Germany and Norway 21
Dag Jenssen, Ingo Bode and Robin Lenz
3 Awakening our epistemic consciousness: Re-thinking
interprofessional health social work 46
Hannah Cootes
4 The importance of 'system knowledge' among Norwegian
social workers in host settings 67
Ivan Harslof
PART II Medicalization and hybrid interventions
5 'Not prioritized, but very important': social work captured in
medical and psychological reasoning 85
Wenche Bekken
6 Social nursing in Denmark: a specialized response to
vulnerability in healthcare 104
Anette Lykke Hindhede, Ingrid Poulsen and Jonas Debesay
7 In the absence of social workers at Danish somatic hospitals:
the social dimension in the social nurse function 119
Karin Hojbjerg, Emilie Marie Andres, Christian Ildrup
Gadgaard, Carsten Juul Jensen and Heidi Lene Myglegaard Andersen
8 The libra of institutional logics: Theorizing hybrid structures
in human service organizations in the field of disability 136
Jens Ineland and Faten Nouf
PART III Interprofessional collaboration
9 Three logics of acculturation on social workers' perceptions
of their interprofessional teamwork 158
Simon Innvaer and Henriette Lund Skyberg
10 'You should do what you're good at': boundary work in
interprofessional teams 174
Sylvie van Dam and Peter Raeymaeckers
PART IV The interface with other organizations
11 Complementary roles or multiple idiosyncrasy?: Patchwork
collaboration in local action against homelessness in Germany 192
Ingo Bode and Moritz Bachmann
12 Between transaction and hybridization: French human service
professionals dealing with multiple logics of action 209
Philippe Lyet
13 Value conflicts: how US social workers manage the ethics of
outsider practice 224
Corey S. Shdaimah, Lauren P. McCarthy, Rachel Imboden
and Patrice Forrester
14 Conclusion to Hybrid Social Work 242
Ivan Harslof, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken
and Ingo Bode
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Social work; Host-setting; Hybrid human services; Epistemic communities; Policy practice; Interprofessional collaboration
Contents
Preface xii
1 Evolving hybrid worlds of social work 1
Ingo Bode, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken and
Ivan Harslof
PART I Contested knowledge - epistemological foundations of
hybrid social work
2 The epistemic culture of hybrid social work: insights from
organisational settings in Germany and Norway 21
Dag Jenssen, Ingo Bode and Robin Lenz
3 Awakening our epistemic consciousness: Re-thinking
interprofessional health social work 46
Hannah Cootes
4 The importance of 'system knowledge' among Norwegian
social workers in host settings 67
Ivan Harslof
PART II Medicalization and hybrid interventions
5 'Not prioritized, but very important': social work captured in
medical and psychological reasoning 85
Wenche Bekken
6 Social nursing in Denmark: a specialized response to
vulnerability in healthcare 104
Anette Lykke Hindhede, Ingrid Poulsen and Jonas Debesay
7 In the absence of social workers at Danish somatic hospitals:
the social dimension in the social nurse function 119
Karin Hojbjerg, Emilie Marie Andres, Christian Ildrup
Gadgaard, Carsten Juul Jensen and Heidi Lene Myglegaard Andersen
8 The libra of institutional logics: Theorizing hybrid structures
in human service organizations in the field of disability 136
Jens Ineland and Faten Nouf
PART III Interprofessional collaboration
9 Three logics of acculturation on social workers' perceptions
of their interprofessional teamwork 158
Simon Innvaer and Henriette Lund Skyberg
10 'You should do what you're good at': boundary work in
interprofessional teams 174
Sylvie van Dam and Peter Raeymaeckers
PART IV The interface with other organizations
11 Complementary roles or multiple idiosyncrasy?: Patchwork
collaboration in local action against homelessness in Germany 192
Ingo Bode and Moritz Bachmann
12 Between transaction and hybridization: French human service
professionals dealing with multiple logics of action 209
Philippe Lyet
13 Value conflicts: how US social workers manage the ethics of
outsider practice 224
Corey S. Shdaimah, Lauren P. McCarthy, Rachel Imboden
and Patrice Forrester
14 Conclusion to Hybrid Social Work 242
Ivan Harslof, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken
and Ingo Bode
Preface xii
1 Evolving hybrid worlds of social work 1
Ingo Bode, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken and
Ivan Harslof
PART I Contested knowledge - epistemological foundations of
hybrid social work
2 The epistemic culture of hybrid social work: insights from
organisational settings in Germany and Norway 21
Dag Jenssen, Ingo Bode and Robin Lenz
3 Awakening our epistemic consciousness: Re-thinking
interprofessional health social work 46
Hannah Cootes
4 The importance of 'system knowledge' among Norwegian
social workers in host settings 67
Ivan Harslof
PART II Medicalization and hybrid interventions
5 'Not prioritized, but very important': social work captured in
medical and psychological reasoning 85
Wenche Bekken
6 Social nursing in Denmark: a specialized response to
vulnerability in healthcare 104
Anette Lykke Hindhede, Ingrid Poulsen and Jonas Debesay
7 In the absence of social workers at Danish somatic hospitals:
the social dimension in the social nurse function 119
Karin Hojbjerg, Emilie Marie Andres, Christian Ildrup
Gadgaard, Carsten Juul Jensen and Heidi Lene Myglegaard Andersen
8 The libra of institutional logics: Theorizing hybrid structures
in human service organizations in the field of disability 136
Jens Ineland and Faten Nouf
PART III Interprofessional collaboration
9 Three logics of acculturation on social workers' perceptions
of their interprofessional teamwork 158
Simon Innvaer and Henriette Lund Skyberg
10 'You should do what you're good at': boundary work in
interprofessional teams 174
Sylvie van Dam and Peter Raeymaeckers
PART IV The interface with other organizations
11 Complementary roles or multiple idiosyncrasy?: Patchwork
collaboration in local action against homelessness in Germany 192
Ingo Bode and Moritz Bachmann
12 Between transaction and hybridization: French human service
professionals dealing with multiple logics of action 209
Philippe Lyet
13 Value conflicts: how US social workers manage the ethics of
outsider practice 224
Corey S. Shdaimah, Lauren P. McCarthy, Rachel Imboden
and Patrice Forrester
14 Conclusion to Hybrid Social Work 242
Ivan Harslof, Simon Innvaer, Dag Jenssen, Wenche Bekken
and Ingo Bode
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.