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2014 | 1(13) | 193-198

Article title

The definition of social work

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
The object of social work are both the individuals and social groups (families or more extended communities). Depending on which groups of people require help, social work arouses various requirements which from the point of view of the social workers’ education create the need for specialisation. One can distinguish several specific groups of the clients of social work: children, the old age people (gerontological nursing), ill and disabled individuals and local communities. Special problems and challenges appear when a child is its object. It happens that because in the case of children separating interim help or long-term financial assistance from the pedagogic influence is impossible, and thus from responsibility for charges’ future. Social workers do not bear full responsibility for the state of child’s future, because they share this responsibility with different subjects, it does not mean, however, that they do not bear it at all. One can distinguish two extreme positions among the theoreticians of social work: according to one of them, represented among others by H. Radlińska, social welfare institutions totally take over the responsibility for the child’s future, what is connected with the limitation of freedom, and according to the latter, such a responsibility, in practice, is not possible.

Keywords

Year

Issue

Pages

193-198

Physical description

Dates

published
2014

Contributors

  • ISM Slovakia

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

Biblioteka Nauki
2156978

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.ojs-issn-1898-0171-year-2014-issue-1_13_-article-c1df978e-7538-3f77-8378-c410e18e3e25
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