1.
The Routledge Handbook of Critical Social Work. (Routledge, 2019).
2.
Featherstone, B., Gupta, A., Morris, K. & White, S. Protecting Children: A Social Model. (Policy Press, 2018).
3.
Featherstone, B., Gupta, A., Morris, K. & White, S. Protecting Children: A Social Model. (Policy Press, 2018).
4.
Fook, J. Social Work: A Critical Approach to Practice. (SAGE, 2016).
5.
Hood, R. Complexity in Social Work. (Sage, 2018).
6.
Safeguarding Adults and Children: Dilemmas and Complex Practice. (Palgrave, 2016).
7.
Lymbery, M. & Postle, K. Social Work and the Transformation of Adult Social Care: Perpetuating a Distorted Vision? (Policy Press, 2015).
8.
Lymbery, M. & Postle, K. Social Work and the Transformation of Adult Social Care: Perpetuating a Distorted Vision? (Policy Press, 2015).
9.
Pearce, J. Child Sexual Exploitation: Why Theory Matters.
10.
Adams, R. Critical Practice in Social Work. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
11.
Dominelli, L. Critical Practice in Social Work. (Palgrave, 2002).
12.
Bernard, C. & Harris, P. Safeguarding Black Children: Good Practice in Child Protection. (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2016).
13.
Safeguarding Black Children: Good Practice in Child Protection. (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2016).
14.
Bhatti-Sinclair, K. Anti-Racist Practice in Social Work. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).
15.
Bhatti-Sinclair, K. Anti-Racist Practice in Social Work. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2011).
16.
Crawford, K. Interprofessional Collaboration in Social Work Practice. (SAGE, 2012).
17.
Crawford, K. Interprofessional Collaboration in Social Work Practice. (SAGE, 2012).
18.
Ferguson, I. & Lavalette, M. Adult Social Care. (Policy Press, 2014).
19.
Holland, S. Child & Family Assessment in Social Work Practice. (SAGE, 2011).
20.
Holland, S. Child & Family Assessment in Social Work Practice. (SAGE, 2011).
21.
Hugman, R. A-Z of Professional Ethics. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
22.
Morris, K. Social Work and Multi-Agency Working: Making a Difference. (Policy Press, 2008).
23.
Rogowski, S. Critical Social Work With Children and Families: Theory, Context and Practice. (Policy Press, 2013).
24.
Welbourne, P. Social Work With Children and Families: Developing Advanced Practice. (Routledge, 2012).
25.
Welbourne, P. Social Work With Children and Families: Developing Advanced Practice. (Routledge, 2012).
26.
Williams, C. & Graham, M. Social Work in a Diverse Society: Transformative Practice With Black and Minority Ethnic Individuals and Communities. (Policy Press, 2016).
27.
Social Work in a Diverse Society: Transformatory Practice With Black and Minority Ethnic Individuals and Communities. (Policy Press, 2016).
28.
The British Journal of Social Work.
29.
The Journal of Adult Protection.
30.
Ethics & Social Welfare.
31.
Child & Family Social Work.
32.
Journal of Interprofessional Care.
33.
Briskman, L., Pease, B. & Allan, J. Critical Social Work: Theories and Practices for a Socially Just World. (Allen & Unwin, 2009).
34.
Barak, A. Critical Questions on Critical Social Work: Students’ Perspectives. The British Journal of Social Work 49, 2130–2147 (2019).
35.
Bradt, L. & Bouverne-De Bie, M. Social Work and the Shift from ‘Welfare’ to ‘Justice’. British Journal of Social Work 39, 113–127 (2009).
36.
Campbell, C. & Baikie, L. Beginning at the Beginning: An Exploration [open access]. Critical Social Work 13, 67–81 (2012).
37.
Duffy, F. A Social Work Perspective on How Ageist Language, Discourses and Understandings Negatively Frame Older People and Why Taking a Critical Social Work Stance Is Essential. British Journal of Social Work 47, 2068–2085 (2016).
38.
Fook, J. Social Work: A Critical Approach to Practice. (SAGE, 2016).
39.
Garrett, P. M. Welfare Words: Critical Social Work and Social Policy. (Sage, 2018).
40.
Hastings, S. J. & Rogowski, S. Critical Social Work with Older People in Neo-liberal Times: Challenges and Critical Possibilities. Practice 27, 21–33 (2015).
41.
Lymbery, M. & Postle, K. Social Work and the Transformation of Adult Social Care: Perpetuating a Distorted Vision? (Policy Press, 2015).
42.
Manchester, R. Towards Critical Mental Health Social Work: Learning From Critical Psychiatry and Psychiatry Survivors. Critical and Radical Social Work 3, 149–154 (2015).
43.
Nelson, D., Price, E. & Zubrzycki, J. Critical Social Work With Unaccompanied Asylum-Seeking Young People: Restoring Hope, Agency and Meaning for the Client and Worker. International Social Work 60, 601–613 (2017).
44.
Montaño, C. Social Work Theory– Practice Relationship: Challenges to Overcoming Positivist and Postmodern Fragmentation. International Social Work 55, 306–319 (2012).
45.
Rogowski, S. Radical/Critical Social Work with Young Offenders: Challenges and Possibilities. Journal of Social Work Practice 28, 7–21 (2014).
46.
Rogowski, S. Critical Social Work With Children and Families: Theory, Context and Practice. (Policy Press, 2013).
47.
Rossiter, A. A Perspective on Critical Social Work. Journal of Progressive Human Services 7, 23–41 (2008).
48.
Sapouna, L. Education for Critical Practice in Mental Health: Opportunities and Challenges. Critical and Radical Social Work 4, 59–76 (2016).
49.
Weiss-Gal, I. Applying Critical Social Work in Direct Practice With Families. Child & Family Social Work 19, 55–64 (2014).
50.
British Association of Social Workers. BASW Human Rights Policy. (2015).
51.
Cemlyn, S. Human Rights Practice: Possibilities and Pitfalls for Developing Emancipatory Social Work. Ethics and Social Welfare 2, 222–242 (2008).
52.
Ife, J. Local and Global Practice: Relocating Social Work as a Human Rights Profession in the New Global Order. European Journal of Social Work 4, 5–15 (2001).
53.
Ife, J. Human Rights and Social Work: Towards Rights-Based Practice. (Cambridge University Press; 3 edition, 2012).
54.
Global Definition of Social Work | International Federation of Social Workers. https://www.ifsw.org/what-is-social-work/global-definition-of-social-work/ (2014).
55.
Reynaert, D. et al. Human Rights at the Heart of the Social Work Curriculum. Social Work Education 38, 21–33 (2019).
56.
Melton, G. B. It’s All About Relationships! The Psychology of Human Rights. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 80, 161–169 (2010).
57.
Sewpaul, V. Global Standards: Promise and Pitfalls for Re-Inscribing Social Work Into Civil Society. International Journal of Social Welfare 14, 210–217 (2005).
58.
It’s Still Personal.
59.
Barclay, P. M. Barclay Report: Social Workers: Their Role and Tasks. (Published for the National Institute for Social Work by Bedford Square Press, 1982).
60.
MINDSPACE —Influencing Behaviour Through Public Policy. (2010).
61.
Cromarty, H. Adult Social Care Funding (England). (2019).
62.
Daly, M. & Lewis, J. The Concept of Social Care and the Analysis of Contemporary Welfare States. The British Journal of Sociology 51, 281–298 (2000).
63.
Putting People First: A Shared Vision and Commitment to the Transformation of Adult Social Care : Department of Health - Publications. https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130104175839/http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/Publicationsandstatistics/Publications/PublicationsPolicyAndGuidance/DH_081118.
64.
Transforming Social Care. (2008).
65.
Care and Support Statutory Guidance - GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/care-act-statutory-guidance/care-and-support-statutory-guidance.
66.
Evans, T. Orientations of Professional Discretion in the Welfare Service State [open access]. Social Work & Society 16, 1–10 (2018).
67.
Evans, T., Hardy, M. & Shaw, I. Evidence and Knowledge for Practice. (Polity, 2010).
68.
Gollins, T. et al. Developing a Wellbeing and Strengths-Based Approach to Social Work Practice: Changing Culture. (2016).
69.
Hadley, R. & Clough, R. Care in Chaos: Frustration and Challenge in Community Care. (Cassell, 1996).
70.
Hadley, R. & Clough, R. Care in Chaos: Frustration and Challenge in Community Care. (Cassell, 1996).
71.
Care Act: Assessment and Eligibility: Strengths-Based Approaches. https://www.scie.org.uk/strengths-based-approaches/guidance (2015).
72.
Thaler, R. H. & Sunstein, C. R. Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness. (Yale University Press, 2008).
73.
Care Act 2014. http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2014/23/contents/enacted.
74.
British Association of Social Workers. Anti-Poverty Guide for Social Work. (2019).
75.
Boone, K., Roets, G. & Roose, R. Social Work, Participation, and Poverty. Journal of Social Work 19, 309–326 (2019).
76.
Daly, M. & Kelly, G. Families and Poverty: Everyday Life on a Low Income. (Polity Press, 2015).
77.
Daly, M. & Kelly, G. Families and Poverty: Everyday Life on a Low Income. (Policy Press, 2015).
78.
Garthwaite, K. Stigma, Shame and ‘People Like Us’: An Ethnographic Study of Foodbank Use in the UK [open access]. Journal of Poverty and Social Justice 24, 277–289 (2016).
79.
Gupta, A. & Blumhardt, H. Giving Poverty a Voice: Families’ Experiences of Social Work Practice in a Risk-Averse Child Protection System. Families, Relationships and Societies 5, 163–172 (2016).
80.
Krumer-Nevo, M. Poverty-Aware Social Work: A Paradigm for Social Work Practice with People in Poverty. British Journal of Social Work 46, 1793–1808 (2016).
81.
Krumer-Nevo, M. Poverty and the Political: Wresting the Political Out of and Into Social Work Theory, Research and Practice. European Journal of Social Work 20, 811–822 (2017).
82.
Lister, R. Poverty. (Polity, 2004).
83.
Morris, K. et al. Social Work, Poverty, and Child Welfare Interventions. Child & Family Social Work 23, 364–372 (2018).
84.
Saar-Heiman, Y., Lavie-Ajayi, M. & Krumer-Nevo, M. Poverty-Aware Social Work Practice: Service Users’ Perspectives. Child & Family Social Work 22, 1054–1063 (2017).
85.
Shildrick, T. Poverty Propaganda: Exploring the Myths. (Policy Press, 2018).
86.
Shildrick, T. Poverty Propaganda: Exploring the Myths. (Policy Press, 2018).
87.
Cameron, A. Impermeable Boundaries? Developments in Professional and Inter-Professional Practice. Journal of Interprofessional Care 25, 53–58 (2011).
88.
Cameron, A., Lart, R., Bostock, L. & Coomber, C. Factors That Promote and Hinder Joint and Integrated Working Between Health and Social Care Services: A Review of Research Literature. Health & Social Care in the Community 22, 225–233 (2014).
89.
Dowling, B. Conceptualising Successful Partnerships. Health and Social Care in the Community 12, 309–317 (2004).
90.
Frost, N. Social Workers in Multidisciplinary Teams: Issues and Dilemmas for Professional Practice. Child  Family Social Work 10, 187–196 (2005).
91.
Frost, N. & Anning, A. Developing multi-professional teamwork for integrated children’s services: research, policy, practice. (Open University Press, 2016).
92.
Hood, R. Complexity in Social Work. (Sage, 2018).
93.
Garrett, P. M. Talking Child Protection. Journal of Social Work 4, 77–97 (2004).
94.
Hood, R. A Critical Realist Model of Complexity for Interprofessional Working. Journal of Interprofessional Care 26, 6–12 (2012).
95.
Hood, R. et al. Collaborating Across the Threshold: The Development of Interprofessional Expertise in Child Safeguarding [open access]. Journal of Interprofessional Care 31, 705–713 (2017).
96.
Hood, R., Gillespie, J. & Davies, J. A Conceptual Review of Interprofessional Expertise in Child Safeguarding. Journal of Interprofessional Care 30, 493–498 (2016).
97.
Lewis, J. Working Together to Identify Child Maltreatment: Social Work and Acute Healthcare. Journal of Integrated Care 23, 302–312 (2015).
98.
Littlechild, B. & Smith, R. S. A Handbook for Interprofessional Practice in the Human Services: Learning to Work Together. (Pearson, 2013).
99.
Littlechild, B. & Smith, R. S. A Handbook for Interprofessional Practice in the Human Services: Learning to Work Together. (Pearson, 2013).
100.
Lymbery, M. United We Stand? Partnership Working in Health and Social Care and the Role of Social Work in Services for Older People. The British Journal of Social Work 36, 1119–1134 (2006).
101.
Mason, K. & Evans, T. Social Work, Inter-Disciplinary Cooperation and Self-Neglect: Exploring Logics of Appropriateness. The British Journal of Social Work 50, 664–681 (2019).
102.
O’Carroll, V., McSwiggan, L. & Campbell, M. Health and Social Care Professionals’ Attitudes to Interprofessional Working and Interprofessional Education: A Literature Review. Journal of Interprofessional Care 30, 42–49 (2016).
103.
Oliver, C. Social Workers as Boundary Spanners: Reframing our Professional Identity for Interprofessional Practice. Social Work Education 32, 773–784 (2013).
104.
Petch, A. Partnership Working and Outcomes: Do Health and Social Care Partnerships Deliver for Users and Carers? Health & Social Care in the Community 21, 623–633 (2013).
105.
Aspinal, F. et al. Safeguarding and Personal Budgets: The Experiences of Adults at Risk. The Journal of Adult Protection 21, 157–168 (2019).
106.
Aspinwall-Roberts, E. Assessments in Social Work With Adults. (Open University Press, 2012).
107.
Aspinwall-Roberts, E. Assessments in Social Work With Adults. (McGraw-Hill Education, 2012).
108.
Bornat, J. & Bytheway, B. Perceptions and Presentations of Living with Everyday Risk in Later Life. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1118–1134 (2010).
109.
Carr, S. SCIE Report 36; Enabling Risk, Ensuring Safety: Self-directed Support and Personal Budgets. https://www.scie.org.uk/publications/reports/report36/ (2010).
110.
Clarke, C. L. Reframing Risk Management in Dementia Care Through Collaborative Learning. Health & Social Care in the Community 19, 23–32 (2011).
111.
Daniel, B., Cross, B., Sherwood-Johnson, F. & Paton, D. Risk and Decision Making in Adult Support and Protection Practice: User Views From Participant Research. British Journal of Social Work 44, 1233–1250 (2014).
112.
Dixon, J. & Robb, M. Working with Women with a Learning Disability Experiencing Domestic Abuse: How Social Workers Can Negotiate Competing Definitions of Risk. British Journal of Social Work 46, 773–788 (2016).
113.
Faulkner, A. The Right to Take Risks. The Journal of Adult Protection 14, 287–296 (2012).
114.
Hardy, M. In Defence of Actuarialism: Interrogating the Logic of Risk in Social Work Practice. Journal of Social Work Practice 31, 395–410 (2017).
115.
Liebenberg, L., Ungar, M. & Ikeda, J. Neo-Liberalism and Responsibilisation in the Discourse of Social Service Workers. British Journal of Social Work 45, 1006–1021 (2015).
116.
Lymbery, M. Assessment and Decision Making. in Social Work and the Transformation of Adult Social Care: Perpetuating a Distorted Vision? (Policy Press, 2015).
117.
Macdonald, G. & Macdonald, K. Safeguarding: A Case for Intelligent Risk Management. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1174–1191 (2010).
118.
Manthorpe, J. & Moriarty, J. Nothing Ventured, Nothing Gained: Risk Guidance for People With Dementia. (2010).
119.
Manthorpe, J. Expertise and Experience: People with Experiences of Using Services and Carers’ Views of the Mental Capacity Act 2005. British Journal of Social Work 39, 884–900 (2009).
120.
Moore, S. Assumption, the Mother of All Foul Ups: A Fundamental Reason for the Continuing Abuse of Adults at Risk. The Journal of Adult Protection 20, 129–143 (2018).
121.
Munro, E. Effective Child Protection. (Sage Publications, 2008).
122.
Munro, E. Effective Child Protection. (Sage Publications, 2008).
123.
Munro, E. & Hubbard, A. A Systems Approach to Evaluating Organisational Change in Children’s Social Care. British Journal of Social Work 41, 726–743 (2011).
124.
Pollack, S. Labelling Clients ‘Risky’: Social Work and the Neo-liberal Welfare State. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1263–1278 (2010).
125.
Heller, N. R. Risk, Hope and Recovery: Converging Paradigms for Mental Health Approaches with Suicidal Clients. British Journal of Social Work 45, 1788–1803 (2015).
126.
Regehr, C. Suicide Risk Assessments: Examining Influences on Clinicians’ Professional Judgement. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 85, 295–301 (2015).
127.
Care Act Assessment and Eligibility: Process Map Introduction. (2014).
128.
Slasberg, C. A Proposed Eligibility and Assessment Framework to Support Delivery of the Government’s Vision for a New Care and Support System. Journal of Care Services Management 7, 26–37 (2013).
129.
Stanford, S. ‘Speaking Back’ to Fear: Responding to the Moral Dilemmas of Risk in Social Work Practice. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1065–1080 (2010).
130.
Taylor, B. J. Developing an Integrated Assessment Tool for the Health and Social Care of Older People. British Journal of Social Work 42, 1293–1314 (2012).
131.
Taylor, B. J. Professional Decision Making in Social Work. (Learning Matters, 2010).
132.
Taylor, B. J. Professional Decision Making in Social Work. (Learning Matters, 2010).
133.
Turney, D. Analysis and Critical Thinking in Assessment. (2009).
134.
Whittaker, A. & Havard, T. Defensive Practice as ‘Fear-Based’ Practice: Social Work’s Open Secret? British Journal of Social Work 46, 1158–1174 (2016).
135.
White, S. The Descriptive Tyranny of the Common Assessment Framework: Technologies of Categorization and Professional Practice in Child Welfare. British Journal of Social Work 39, 1197–1217 (2009).
136.
Barlow, J., Fisher, J. & Jones, D. Systematic Review of Models of Analysing Significant Harm. (2012).
137.
Braye, S., Orr, D. & Preston-Shoot, M. Autonomy and Protection in Self-neglect Work: The Ethical Complexity of Decision-making. Ethics and Social Welfare 11, 320–335 (2017).
138.
Calder, G. Caring About Deliberation, Deliberating About Care. Ethics and Social Welfare 9, 130–146 (2015).
139.
Evans, T. Professionals, Managers and Discretion: Critiquing Street-Level Bureaucracy. British Journal of Social Work 41, 368–386 (2011).
140.
Galpin, D. & Hughes, D. A Joined Up Approach to Safeguarding and Personalisation: A Framework for Practice in Multi‐agency Decision‐making. The Journal of Adult Protection 13, 150–159 (2011).
141.
Gillingham, P. Decision-Making Tools and the Development of Expertise in Child Protection Practitioners: Are We ‘Just Breeding Workers Who Are Good at Ticking Boxes’? Child & Family Social Work 16, 412–421 (2011).
142.
Hurst, M. Professional Judgement in the Assessment of Risk: Is There a Role for Systemic Practice? Journal of Family Therapy 33, 168–180 (2011).
143.
Hollomotz, A. Beyond ‘Vulnerability’: An Ecological Model Approach to Conceptualizing Risk of Sexual Violence against People with Learning Difficulties. British Journal of Social Work 39, 99–112 (2009).
144.
Keddell, E. Reasoning Processes in Child Protection Decision Making: Negotiating Moral Minefields and Risky Relationships. British Journal of Social Work 41, 1251–1270 (2011).
145.
Keddell, E. & Hyslop, I. Role Type, Risk Perceptions and Judgements in Child Welfare: A Mixed Methods Vignette Study. Children and Youth Services Review 87, 130–139 (2018).
146.
Killick, C. & Taylor, B. J. Judgements of Social Care Professionals on Elder Abuse Referrals: A Factorial Survey. British Journal of Social Work 42, 814–832 (2012).
147.
Leonard, K. & O’Connor, L. Transitioning From ‘Outside Observer’ to ‘Inside Player’ in Social Work: Practitioner and Student Perspectives on Developing Expertise in Decision-Making. Journal of Social Work Practice 32, 205–218 (2018).
148.
Mason, K. & Evans, T. Social Work, Inter-Disciplinary Cooperation and Self-Neglect: Exploring Logics of Appropriateness. The British Journal of Social Work (2019) doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcz031.
149.
McDonald, A. The Impact of the 2005 Mental Capacity Act on Social Workers’ Decision Making and Approaches to the Assessment of Risk. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1229–1246 (2010).
150.
O’Connor, L. & Leonard, K. Decision Making in Children and Families Social Work: The Practitioner’s Voice. British Journal of Social Work 44, 1805–1822 (2014).
151.
Rawles, J. Developing Social Work Professional Judgment Skills: Enhancing Learning in Practice by Researching Learning in Practice. Journal of Teaching in Social Work 36, 102–122 (2016).
152.
Saltiel, D. Observing Front Line Decision Making in Child Protection. British Journal of Social Work 46, 2104–2119 (2016).
153.
Samsonsen, V. & Turney, D. The Role of Professional Judgement in Social Work Assessment: A Comparison Between Norway and England. European Journal of Social Work 20, 112–124 (2017).
154.
Early Intervention: Decision-Making in Local Authority Children’s Services. (2013).
155.
Turney, D. & Ruch, G. Thinking about Thinking after Munro: The Contribution of Cognitive Interviewing to Child-Care Social Work Supervision and Decision-Making Practices. British Journal of Social Work 46, 669–685 (2016).
156.
Anitha, S. No Recourse, No Support: State Policy and Practice Towards South Asian Women Facing Domestic Violence in the UK. British Journal of Social Work 40, 462–479 (2010).
157.
Appleton, J. V. Child Sexual Exploitation, Victimisation and Vulnerability. Child Abuse Review 23, 155–158 (2014).
158.
Bacchus, L. J. "It’s Always Good to Ask”: A Mixed Methods Study on the Perceived Role of Sexual Health Practitioners Asking Gay and Bisexual Men About Experiences of Domestic Violence and Abuse. Journal of Mixed Methods Research 12, 221–243 (2018).
159.
Chung, D. Domestic Violence: UK and Australian Developments. in Policy and Social Work Practice 137–150 (Sage Publications Ltd, 2016).
160.
Chung, D. Domestic Violence: UK and Australian Developments. in Policy and Social Work Practice (eds. Evans, A. & Keating, F.) 137–150 (SAGE, 2015).
161.
Dixon, J. & Robb, M. Working With Women With a Learning Disability Experiencing Domestic Abuse: How Social Workers Can Negotiate Competing Definitions of Risk. British Journal of Social Work 46, 773–788 (2016).
162.
Hague, G., Thiara, R. & Mullender, A. Disabled Women, Domestic Violence and Social Care: The Risk of Isolation, Vulnerability and Neglect. British Journal of Social Work 41, 148–165 (2011).
163.
Hester, M. Who Does What to Whom? Gender and Domestic Violence Perpetrators in English Police Records. European Journal of Criminology 10, 623–637 (2013).
164.
Holt, S. Domestic Violence and the Paradox of Post-Separation Mothering. British Journal of Social Work 47, 2049–2067 (2017).
165.
Lapierre, S. More Responsibilities, Less Control: Understanding the Challenges and Difficulties Involved in Mothering in the Context of Domestic Violence. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1434–1451 (2010).
166.
Keeling, J. & van Wormer, K. Social Worker Interventions in Situations of Domestic Violence: What We Can Learn from Survivors’ Personal Narratives? British Journal of Social Work 42, 1354–1370 (2012).
167.
McGavock, L. & Spratt, T. Children Exposed to Domestic Violence: Using Adverse Childhood Experience Scores to Inform Service Response. British Journal of Social Work 47, 1128–1146 (2016).
168.
McLaughlin, H. Adult Social Work and High-Risk Domestic Violence Cases. Journal of Social Work 18, 288–306 (2018).
169.
Robbins, R. & Cook, K. ‘Don’t Even Get Us Started on Social Workers’: Domestic Violence, Social Work and Trust—An Anecdote From Research. The British Journal of Social Work 48, 1664–1681 (2018).
170.
Stanley, N. Fathers and Domestic Violence: Building Motivation for Change through Perpetrator Programmes. Child Abuse Review 21, 264–274 (2012).
171.
Witt, L. & Diaz, C. Social Workers’ Attitudes Towards Female Victims of Domestic Violence: A Study in One English Local Authority. Child & Family Social Work 24, 209–217 (2018).
172.
Wydall, S. & Zerk, R. Domestic Abuse and Older People: Factors Influencing Help-Seeking. The Journal of Adult Protection 19, 247–260 (2017).
173.
Barnes, C. Exploring Disability: A Sociological Introduction. (Polity Press, 2010).
174.
Bartlett, R. & O’Connor, D. From Personhood to Citizenship: Broadening the Lens for Dementia Practice and Research. Journal of Aging Studies 21, 107–118 (2007).
175.
Beckett, A. E. & Buckner, L. Promoting Positive Attitudes Towards Disabled People: Definition Of, Rationale and Prospects for                            Education. British Journal of Sociology of Education 33, 873–891 (2012).
176.
Booth, T., McConnell, D. & Booth, W. Temporal Discrimination and Parents with Learning Difficulties in the Child Protection System. British Journal of Social Work 36, 997–1015 (2005).
177.
Burke, P. Brothers and Sisters of Disabled Children: The Experience of Disability by Association. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1681–1699 (2010).
178.
Coren, E., Iredale, W., Bywater, P., Rutter, D. & Robinson, J. The Contribution of Social Work and Social Care to the Reduction of Health Inequality. vol. Research Briefing 33.
179.
Donaldson, E. J. Introduction: Disability and Emotion: ‘There’s No Crying in Disability Studies!’ Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies 5, 129–135 (2011).
180.
Flynn, M. & Citarella, V. Winterbourne View Hospital: A Glimpse of the Legacy. The Journal of Adult Protection 15, 173–181 (2013).
181.
Goodley, D. Disability Studies: An Interdisciplinary Introduction. (SAGE, 2017).
182.
Goodley, D. Dis/entangling Critical Disability Studies. Disability & Society 28, 631–644 (2013).
183.
Gould, S. & Dodd, K. ‘Normal People Can Have a Child but Disability Can’t’: The Experiences of Mothers With Mild Learning Disabilities Who Have Had Their Children Removed. British Journal of Learning Disabilities 42, 25–35 (2014).
184.
Hunter, S. & Rowley, D. Social Work With People With Learning Difficulties: Making a Difference. (Policy, 2015).
185.
Koprowska, J. Communication & Interpersonal Skills in Social Work. (Learning Matters, 2014).
186.
James, E., Morgan, H. & Mitchell, R. Named Social Workers – Better Social Work for Learning Disabled People? Disability & Society 32, 1650–1655 (2017).
187.
Landman, R. A. "A Counterfeit Friendship”: Mate Crime and People With Learning Disabilities. The Journal of Adult Protection 16, 355–366 (2014).
188.
Lewis, C., Stenfert-Kroese, B. & O’Brien, A. Child and Family Social Workers’ Experiences of Working With Parents With Intellectual Disabilities [open access]. Advances in Mental Health and Intellectual Disabilities 9, 327–337 (2015).
189.
Manthorpe, J. & Martineau, S. What Can and Cannot Be Learned from Serious Case Reviews of the Care and Treatment of Adults with Learning Disabilities in England? Messages for Social Workers. British Journal of Social Work 45, 331–348 (2015).
190.
Death by Indifference: 74 Deaths and Counting – a Progress Report 5 Years On.
191.
Mencap. Your Guide to Communicating with a Person with a Learning Difficulty. (2016).
192.
Morgan, H. The Social Model of Disability as a Threshold Concept: Troublesome Knowledge and Liminal Spaces in Social Work Education. Social Work Education 31, 215–226 (2012).
193.
Oliver, M., Sapey, B. & Thomas, P. Social Work With Disabled People. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
194.
Allen, D. & Riding, S. A. The Fragility of Professional Competence: A Report by the European Roma Rights Centre - A Preliminary Account of Child Protection Practice With Romani and Traveller Children in England.
195.
Bolton, S., Kaur, K., Luh, S. S., Peirce, J. & Yeo, C. Working With Refugee Children: Current Issues in Best Practice. (Immigration Law Practitioners’ Association ILPA, 2011).
196.
Cemlyn, S. Human Rights and Gypsies and Travellers: An Exploration of the Application of a Human Rights Perspective to Social Work with a Minority Community in Britain. British Journal of Social Work 38, 153–173 (2008).
197.
Chantler, K. Gender, Asylum Seekers and Mental Distress: Challenges for Mental Health Social Work. British Journal of Social Work 42, 318–334 (2012).
198.
Chase, E. Agency and Silence: Young People Seeking Asylum Alone in the UK. British Journal of Social Work 40, 2050–2068 (2010).
199.
Into the Unknown: Children’s Journeys Through the Asylum Process. https://www.childrenssociety.org.uk/what-we-do/resources-and-publications/publications-library/unknown-childrens-journeys-through-asyl-0 (2012).
200.
Unaccompanied Young Migrants: Identity, Care and Justice. (Policy Press, 2019).
201.
Unaccompanied Young Migrants: Identity, Care and Justice. (Policy Press, 2019).
202.
Crawley, H. & Kohli, R. K. S. ‘She Endures With Me’: An Evaluation of the Scottish Guardianship Service Pilot. (2013).
203.
Care of Unaccompanied Migrant Children and Child Victims of Modern Slavery - GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/care-of-unaccompanied-and-trafficked-children.
204.
Seeking Support: A Guide to the Rights and Entitlements of Separated Children. (2017).
205.
EPCAT UK & Missing People. Heading Back to Harm: A Study on Trafficked and Unaccompanied Children Going Missing From Care in the UK. https://www.ecpat.org.uk/Handlers/Download.ashx?IDMF=875b65b5-08d4-4e9f-a28c-331d1421519f (2016).
206.
Farmer, N. J. ‘No Recourse to Public Funds’, Insecure Immigration Status and Destitution: The Role of Social Work? Critical and Radical Social Work 5, 357–367 (2017).
207.
Gladwell, C. & Elwyn, H. Broken Futures: Young Afghan Asylum Seekers in the Uk and on Return to Their Country of Origin. vol. Research Paper No. 246 (2012).
208.
Jolly, A. No Recourse to Social Work? Statutory Neglect, Social Exclusion and Undocumented Migrant Families in the UK. Social Inclusion 6, 190–200 (2018).
209.
Kohli, R. & Mitchell, F. Working With Unaccompanied Asylum Seeking Children: Issues for Policy and Practice. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2007).
210.
Kohli, R. K. S. The Sound Of Silence: Listening to What Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children Say and Do Not Say. British Journal of Social Work 36, 707–721 (2006).
211.
Meloni, F. & Chase, E. Transitions Into Institutional Adulthood. (2017).
212.
Newbigging, K., Thomas, N., Newbigging, K. & Thomas, N. Good Practice in Social Care for Asylum Seekers and Refugees. https://www.scie.org.uk/publications/guides/guide37-good-practice-in-social-care-with-refugees-and-asylum-seekers/ (2010).
213.
Palmer, D. & Ward, K. Unheard Voices Listening to Refugees and Asylum Seekers in the Planning and Delivery of Mental Health Service Provision in London. https://www.scie-socialcareonline.org.uk/unheard-voices-listening-to-refugees-and-asylum-seekers-in-the-planning-and-delivery-of-mental-health-service-provision-in-london/r/a11G000000180foIAA (2010).
214.
Robinson, K. & Masocha, S. Divergent Practices in Statutory and Voluntary-Sector Settings? Social Work with Asylum Seekers. British Journal of Social Work 47, 1517–1533 (2016).
215.
Sigona, N., Chase, E. & Humphris, R. Protecting the ‘Best Interests’ of the Child in Transition to Adulthood. (2017).
216.
Sigona, N., Chase, E. & Humphris, R. Understanding Causes and Consequences of Going ‘Missing’. (2017).
217.
Wright, F. Social Work Practice with Unaccompanied Asylum-Seeking Young People Facing Removal. British Journal of Social Work 44, 1027–1044 (2014).
218.
Social work with refugees, asylum seekers and migrants: theory and skills for practice. (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2019).
219.
Social Work With Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Migrants: Theory and Skills for Practice. (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2019).
220.
Durose, C. Beyond ‘Street Level Bureaucrats’: Re‐interpreting the Role of Front Line Public Sector Workers. Critical Policy Studies 1, 217–234 (2007).
221.
Evans, T. ‘Street-Level Bureaucracy, Management and the Corrupted World of Service’. European Journal of Social Work 19, 602–615 (2016).
222.
Evans, T. Policy Work and the Ethics of Obedience and Resistance: Perspectives from Britain and Beyond. in Social work and the making of social policy (eds. Klammer, U., Leiber, S. & Leitner, S.) 139–154 (Policy Press, 2019).
223.
Evans, T. Policy Work and the Ethics of Obedience and Resistance: Perspectives from Britain and Beyond. in Social Work and the Making of Social Policy (eds. Klammer, U., Leiber, S. & Leitner, S.) 139–154 (Policy Press, 2019).
224.
Frisch-Aviram, N., Cohen, N. & Beeri, I. Low-Level Bureaucrats, Local Government Regimes and Policy Entrepreneurship. Policy Sciences 51, 39–57 (2018).
225.
Hupe, P. L. & Hill, M. J. ‘And the Rest Is implementation.’ Comparing Approaches to What Happens in Policy Processes Beyond. Public Policy and Administration 31, 103–121 (2016).
226.
Lavee, E. & Cohen, N. How Street‐level Bureaucrats Become Policy Entrepreneurs: The Case of Urban Renewal. Governance 32, 475–492 (2019).
227.
Maynard-Moody, S. & Musheno, M. State Agent or Citizen Agent: Two Narratives of Discretion. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory: J-PART 10, (2000).
228.
Mintrom, M. & Norman, P. Policy Entrepreneurship and Policy Change. Policy Studies Journal 37, 649–667 (2009).
229.
Banks, S. Everyday Ethics in Professional Life: Social Work as Ethics Work. Ethics and Social Welfare 10, 35–52 (2016).
230.
Banks, S. Ethics in an Age of Austerity: Social Work and the Evolving New Public Management. Journal of Social Intervention: Theory and Practice 20, 5–23 (2011).
231.
Banks, S. Ethics and Values in Social Work. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
232.
Banks, S. & Nøhr, K. Practising Social Work Ethics Around the World: Cases and Commentaries. (Routledge, 2012).
233.
Calder, G. & Hupe, P. Controlled Freedom: Dealing with Discretion. in Discretion and the Quest for Controlled Freedom 409–428 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019).
234.
Calder, G. & Hupe, P. Controlled Freedom: Dealing with Discretion. in Discretion and the Quest for Controlled Freedom (eds. Evans, T. & Hupe, P.) 409–428 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2020).
235.
Clifford, D. & Burke, B. Anti-Oppressive Ethics and Values in Social Work. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2009).
236.
Evans, T. Exploring Ethical Agency in Public Service. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 28, 620–623 (2018).
237.
Evans, T. Street-Level Bureaucracy, Management and the Corrupted World of Service. European Journal of Social Work 19, 602–615 (2016).
238.
Evans, T. & Hardy, M. The Ethics of Practical Reasoning—Exploring the Terrain. European Journal of Social Work 20, 947–957 (2017).
239.
Fook, J. Social Work: Critical Theory and Practice. (SAGE, 2002).
240.
Gray, M. Moral Sources and Emergent Ethical Theories in Social Work. British Journal of Social Work 40, 1794–1811 (2010).
241.
Gray, M. & Webb, S. A. Ethics and Value Perspectives in Social Work. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
242.
Gray, M. & Webb, S. A. Ethics and Value Perspectives in Social Work. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
243.
Hugman, R. Culture, Values and Ethics in Social Work: Embracing Diversity. (Routledge, 2013).
244.
Supervision in Social Work: Contemporary Issues. (Routledge, 2017).
245.
Davys, A. & Beddoe, L. Best Practice in Professional Supervision: A Guide for the Helping Professions. (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2010).
246.
Davys, A. & Beddoe, L. Best Practice in Professional Supervision: A Guide for the Helping Professions. (Jessica Kingsley, 2010).
247.
Turner-Daly, B. & Jack, G. Rhetoric vs. Reality in Social Work Supervision: The Experiences of a Group of Child Care Social Workers in England. Child & Family Social Work 22, 36–46 (2017).
248.
Davys, A. M. & Beddoe, L. The Reflective Learning Model: Supervision of Social Work Students. Social Work Education 28, 919–933 (2009).
249.
Grant, L. & Kinman, G. Developing Resilience for Social Work Practice. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
250.
Golia, G. M. & McGovern, A. R. If You Save Me, I’ll Save You: The Power of Peer Supervision in Clinical Training and Professional Development. British Journal of Social Work 45, 634–650 (2015).
251.
Ingram, R. Emotions, Social Work Practice and Supervision: An Uneasy Alliance? Journal of Social Work Practice 27, 5–19 (2013).
252.
Lusk, M., Terrazas, S. & Salcido, R. Critical Cultural Competence in Social Work Supervision. Human Service Organizations: Management, Leadership & Governance 1–13 (2017) doi:10.1080/23303131.2017.1313801.
253.
Manthorpe, J. Content and Purpose of Supervision in Social Work Practice in England: Views of Newly Qualified Social Workers, Managers and Directors. British Journal of Social Work 45, 52–68 (2015).
254.
Munro, E. & Great Britain. Department for Education. The Munro Review of Child Protection: Final Report: A Child-Centred System. vol. 8062 (TSO, 2011).
255.
Munro, E. The Munro Review of Child Protection: Final Report: A Child-Centred System. (2011).
256.
O’Donoghue, K. & Tsui, M. Social Work Supervision Research (1970-2010): The Way We Were and the Way Ahead. British Journal of Social Work 45, 616–633 (2013).
257.
Revell, L. & Burton, V. Supervision and the Dynamics of Collusion: A Rule of Optimism? British Journal of Social Work 46, 1587–1601 (2016).
258.
Saltiel, D. Supervision: A Contested Space for Learning and Decision Making. Qualitative Social Work: Research and Practice 16, 533–549 (2017).
259.
Tsui, M. Social Work Supervision: Contexts and Concepts. (SAGE Publications, 2005).
260.
Tsui, M. Social Work Supervision: Contexts and Concepts. (SAGE Publications, 2005).
261.
Wonnacott, J. Mastering Social Work Supervision. (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2012).
262.
Wonnacott, J. Mastering Social Work Supervision. (Jessica Kingsley, 2012).
263.
Wilkins, D. How Is Supervision Recorded in Child and Family Social Work? an Analysis of 244 Written Records of Formal Supervision. Child & Family Social Work 22, 1130–1140 (2017).
264.
Puppet on a String: The Urgent Need to Cut Children Free From Sexual Exploitation. (2011).
265.
Beckett, H. et al. ‘It’s Wrong-but You Get Used to It’: A Qualitative Study of Gang-Associated Sexual Violence Towards, and Exploitation Of, Young People in England. (2013).
266.
Bernard, C. An Exploration of How Social Workers Engage Neglectful Parents from Affluent Backgrounds in the Child Protection System. (2018).
267.
Broadhurst, K., Grover, C. & Jamieson, J. Critical Perspectives on Safeguarding Children. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009).
268.
Broadhurst, K., Grover, C. & Jamieson, J. Critical Perspectives on Safeguarding Children. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009).
269.
Contextual Safeguarding Network. https://www.contextualsafeguarding.org.uk/.
270.
Child Sexual Exploitation: Definition and Guide for Practitioners | GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/child-sexual-exploitation-definition-and-guide-for-practitioners.
271.
Preventing Neglect, Abuse and Exploitation | GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/childcare-parenting/preventing-neglect-abuse-and-exploitation.
272.
Teaching Online Safety in Schools | GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/teaching-online-safety-in-schools.
273.
Flood, S. & Holmes, D. Child Neglect and Its Relationship to Other Forms of Harm – Responding Effectively to Children’s Needs: Executive Summary. (2016).
274.
Young People & Gambling. (2018).
275.
Strengthened Guidance to Protect Children at Risk | GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/strengthened-guidance-to-protect-children-at-risk.
276.
Criminal Exploitation and ‘County Lines’: Learn From Past Mistakes, Report Finds | GOV.UK. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/criminal-exploitation-and-county-lines-learn-from-past-mistakes-report-finds (2018).
277.
Jay, A. Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Exploitation in Rotherham (1997 – 2013). (2014).
278.
Safeguarding Adults and Children: Dilemmas and Complex Practice. (Palgrave, 2016).
279.
Pearce, J., Hynes, P. & Bovarnick, S. Breaking the Wall of Silence: Practitioners’ Responses to Trafficked Children and Young People. (2009).
280.
Pearce, J. J. Working with Trafficked Children and Young People: Complexities in Practice. British Journal of Social Work 41, 1424–1441 (2011).
281.
Rogowski, S. Critical Social Work With Children and Families: Theory, Context and Practice. (Policy Press, 2013).
282.
Rogowski, S. Critical Social Work in Child Protection/safeguarding: Challenges and (Fewer) Opportunities. Critical and Radical Social Work 2, 43–58 (2014).
283.
The Different Forms of Child Exploitation | The Children’s Society. https://www.childrenssociety.org.uk/news-and-blogs/our-blog/the-different-forms-of-child-exploitation.
284.
Anka, A., Sorensen, P., Brandon, M. & Bailey, S. Social Work Intervention With Adults Who Self-Neglect in England: Responding to the Care Act 2014. The Journal of Adult Protection 19, 67–77 (2017).
285.
Aspinal, F. et al. Safeguarding and Personal Budgets: The Experiences of Adults at Risk. The Journal of Adult Protection 21, 157–168 (2019).
286.
Barnett, D. Self-Neglect and Hoarding: A Guide to Safeguarding and Support. (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2018).
287.
Braye, S., Orr, D. & Preston-Shoot, M. Autonomy and Protection in Self-neglect Work: The Ethical Complexity of Decision-making. Ethics and Social Welfare 11, 320–335 (2017).
288.
Braye, S., Orr, D. & Preston-Shoot, M. Serious Case Review Findings on the Challenges of Self-Neglect: Indicators for Good Practice. The Journal of Adult Protection 17, 75–87 (2015).
289.
Briggs, M. & Cooper, A. Making Safeguarding Personal: Progress of English Local Authorities. The Journal of Adult Protection 20, 59–68 (2018).
290.
Fyson, R. & Kitson, D. Independence or Protection – Does It Have to Be a Choice?                Reflections on the abuse of people with learning disabilities in Cornwall. Critical Social Policy 27, 426–436 (2007).
291.
Kirk, C. A., Killick, C., McAllister, A. & Taylor, B. Social Workers’ Perceptions of Restorative Approaches With Families in Cases of Elder Abuse: A Qualitative Study. The Journal of Adult Protection 21, 190–200 (2019).
292.
Andrew Landman, R. "A Counterfeit Friendship”: Mate Crime and People With Learning Disabilities. The Journal of Adult Protection 16, 355–366 (2014).
293.
Mason, K. & Evans, T. Social Work, Inter-Disciplinary Cooperation and Self-Neglect: Exploring Logics of Appropriateness. The British Journal of Social Work (2019) doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcz031.
294.
Moore, S. Assumption, the Mother of All Foul Ups: A Fundamental Reason for the Continuing Abuse of Adults at Risk. The Journal of Adult Protection 20, 129–143 (2018).
295.
Pritchard-Jones, L. "Adults at Risk”: "Vulnerability” by Any Other Name? The Journal of Adult Protection 20, 47–58 (2018).
296.
Redley, M., Jennings, S., Holland, A. & Clare, I. Making adult safeguarding personal. The Journal of Adult Protection 17, 195–204 (2015).
297.
Rogers, J. & Bright, L. Assessments of Mental Capacity: Upholding the Rights of the Vulnerable or the Misleading Comfort of Pseudo Objectivity? The Journal of Adult Protection 21, 74–84 (2019).
298.
Romeo, L. Social Work and Safeguarding Adults. The Journal of Adult Protection 17, 205–207 (2015).
299.
Sherwood‐Johnson, F., Cross, B. & Daniel, B. The Experience of Being Protected. The Journal of Adult Protection 15, 115–126 (2013).
300.
Wallcraft, J. Involvement of Service Users in Adult Safeguarding. The Journal of Adult Protection 14, 142–150 (2012).
301.
Wydall, S. & Zerk, R. Domestic Abuse and Older People: Factors Influencing Help-Seeking. The Journal of Adult Protection 19, 247–260 (2017).