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5th Annual International Conference on Sociology
Call for Papers and Participation, Deadline: October 11, 2010
The Forgotten Epidemic HIV/AIDS: Crisis in Black America
Deadline for Abstract Submission: September 8, 2010
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Deadline for Submissions: October 31, 2010

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Professional Opportunity
Rutgers University School of Social Work, Two Tenure-Track Faculty Positions
Professional Opportunity
University of North Dakota, One-year Visiting Assistant Professor, Counseling Psychology
ESIN Congratulates
Otima Doyle, PhD, MSW
Professional Opportunity
University of Michigan National Center for Institutional Diversity, Postdoctoral Program
Funding Opportunity
Health Promotion Among Racial and Ethnic Minority Males (R01)
Social Work Resource
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Scientific Update

Black patients, women miss out on strongest medications for...
Article highlighting research of Carmen Green
A Meta-Study of Black Male Mental Health and Well-Being
D.C. Watkins, R.L. Walker, and D.M. Griffith

Scientific News

Risk, Instrumentalism and the Humane Project in Social Work...

Broadhurst, K. Hall, C., Wastell, D., White, S. and Pithouse, A.

2010-02-04 08:07:15

Risk, Instrumentalism and the Humane Project in Social Work: Identifying the Informal Logics of Risk Management in Children's Statutory Services
Broadhurst, K. Hall, C., Wastell, D., White, S. and Pithouse, A.
British Journal of Social Work, doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcq011
bjsw.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/bcq011v1

This paper addresses growing professional discontents with the increasing formalisation of social work practice exerted through systems of risk management and audit. Drawing on an ESRC-funded study of social work practices in children's statutory services, this paper provides a critique of instrumental approaches to risk management in social work. Through the discussion of three illustrative case examples, we argue that risk management is an inherently complex, contingent and negotiated activity. Social work practitioners are obliged to comply with risk reduction technologies, but informal processes continue to play a critical role in shaping decisions and actions in this relationship-based profession. From practitioner accounts, we identify key elements of the informal logics of risk management. We conclude that the bureaucratic–instrumental bias manifest in the modernisation of children's services, in privileging metrics and administrative power leaves the informal and relational aspects of practice under-emphasised and under-theorised. Suggestions are made about how practice might be advanced in the complex world of child welfare and protection.
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