Social Media and Social Work: implications and opportunities for practice [electronic resource] / edited by Claudia Megele, Peter Buzzi ; cover design by Clifford Hayes.
Material type:
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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E-Books | MEF eKitap Kütüphanesi | Jstor e-Book - EBA | HV 42 .S63 2020 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | JSTOR00006 |
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HM851 Disability, human rights, and information technology / | HN18 .S63 2011 Social Policy in Challenging Times : Economic Crisis and Welfare Systems. | HT241 .Y37 2011eb The city as fulcrum of global sustainability / | HV 42 .S63 2020 Social Media and Social Work: implications and opportunities for practice | JC337 .C5636 2013 Civil Society in the Age of Monitory Democracy. | JC421 .P37 2021eb After democracy : imagining our political future / | JC 423 .M1265 2019 Fear of breakdown : politics and psychoanalysis |
Includes bibliographical references and index (pages 221-228).
The COVID-19 pandemic has shed fresh light on the ways that social media and digital technologies can be effectively harnessed to support relationship-based social work practice. However, it has also highlighted the complex risks, ethics and practical challenges that such technologies pose. This book helps practitioners and students navigate this complex terrain and explore and build upon its multiple opportunities. It uses real-life examples to examine how practitioners can assess the impact of new technologies on their professional conduct and use them in a way that enhance public confidence and relationship-based practice. The authors explore how digital technologies can support multiple areas of service including social work with children, families and adults, mental health social work, youth justice and working with online communities. They also consider regulatory questions and provide a roadmap for good practice.The COVID-19 pandemic has shed fresh light on the ways that social media and digital technologies can be effectively harnessed to support relationship-based social work practice. However, it has also highlighted the complex risks, ethics and practical challenges that such technologies pose. This book helps practitioners and students navigate this complex terrain and explore and build upon its multiple opportunities. It uses real-life examples to examine how practitioners can assess the impact of new technologies on their professional conduct and use them in a way that enhance public confidence and relationship-based practice. The authors explore how digital technologies can support multiple areas of service including social work with children, families and adults, mental health social work, youth justice and working with online communities. They also consider regulatory questions and provide a roadmap for good practice.