Canadian Social Policy for Social Workers - Softcover

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9780199026845: Canadian Social Policy for Social Workers

Synopsis

Demystifying Canadian social policy for social work students by critically exploring how social policy shapes and regulates our daily lives

Bringing together nineteen contributed selections by researchers and practitioners in the field, this accessible introduction examines the many ways social policy impacts our lives. Featuring case examples, international comparisons, and case studies on policy change throughout, the text illustrates how the study of social policy is a crucial dimension of all social work practice.

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About the Author

Robert Harding, Associate Professor, School of Social Work and Human Services, University of the Fraser Valley,Daphne Jeyapal, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Education and Social Work, Thompson Rivers University

Robert Harding is an associate professor who teaches in the BSW and MSW programs at the University of the Fraser Valley. In the late 1990s, Robert led the university in partnering with the Sto:lo Nation to develop an Indigenous social services program based on traditional principles of healing and helping. He has presented his research in Canada, the US, Costa Rica, Scotland, Finland, and Germany, and has published in journals such as the Canadian Review of Social Policy, Discourse and Society, Canadian Journal of Native Studies, and the American Indian Culture and Research Journal.

Daphne Jeyapal is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at Thompson Rivers University. Daphne earned her PhD in social work from the University of Toronto in 2014. Her research centres on challenging racial discrimination in social activism, social work, and Canadian social policy. She is the principal investigator for a SSHRC Insight Development Grant on

"Anti-terrorism or anti-activism? Examining public and policy discourses on the criminalization of diasporic resistance in Canada." At present, she lives and works on the Tk'emlups te Secwepemc territory, the unceded traditional lands of the Secwepemc Nation.

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