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Articles 7681 - 7710 of 8467
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Political And Social Attitudes Among The Unemployed: A Marxist Analysis, Richard Henry Ropers
Political And Social Attitudes Among The Unemployed: A Marxist Analysis, Richard Henry Ropers
Dissertations
No abstract provided.
Psychodramatic Treatment Techniques With Prisoners In A State Of Role Transition, Kenneth Byrne
Psychodramatic Treatment Techniques With Prisoners In A State Of Role Transition, Kenneth Byrne
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
One of the inevitable results of incarceration is the difficulty faced by the offender at the time of his release in his re-entry to a free society. He must adjust to a system which in today's rapidly changinq, technological world, has often chanoed drastically since the time of his entry. The prisoner has had an extended period of time in the prison community in which to warm up to the role of inmate, with its concommitant behavior. (Johnson, Savitz & Wolfgang, pp. 383-496).
Police Professionalism: Another Look At The Issues, Samuel Walker
Police Professionalism: Another Look At The Issues, Samuel Walker
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The concept of professionalism is frequently used as a frame of reference for evaluating the organizational status of the American police. Observers generally conclude that the police lack most of the essential features of professional status. This paper questions the utility of using such a standard for evaluating the police. The professions of medicine, law and education are themselves in a state of flux. In particular, the crucial concept of professional autonomy appears increasingly incompatible with the goal of public accountability. Rather than expect the police to strive toward the traditional forms of professionalism, we should think in terms of …
The Family - 100 Years Of Neglect, Frank J. Montemuro
The Family - 100 Years Of Neglect, Frank J. Montemuro
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The following address was made at an All-Day Institute convened by the Family Court Division of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas in conjunction with the Family Institute of Philadelphia to explore issues and new responsibilities faced by public and private agencies dealing with the myriad changes in family life in this last decade of social upheaval.
The Dysfunctional Dialectics Of The Prison, Richard A. Ball
The Dysfunctional Dialectics Of The Prison, Richard A. Ball
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
According to the functionalist perspective, the survival of an organization is a matter of functions performed. A dialectical framework allows us to deal with the fact that durability is not necessarily connected with functionality. Organizations may be built on retrogressive accomodations which amount to dysfunctional dialectics. The prison represents an example in that it has developed as a polarity of commonweal and service organization, and is divided against itself. The coercive structure results in compliance patterns of an alienative nature. The basic dialectical units are roles which divide prisoners by emphasizing power relationships. Staff authority is weakened by a process …
Police And Social Workers As Members Of New Crisis-Management Teams, Karl Schonborn
Police And Social Workers As Members Of New Crisis-Management Teams, Karl Schonborn
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
A variety of programs have emerged of late which involve the close collaboration and cooperation of police and social workers in order to deal with family crises. By pooling their respective skills and resources, police and social workers hope to respond more effectively to the diverse situations and challenges presented by family crises. Several of these programs are reviewed here and one is probed in depth. Also, various questions are raised regarding some of the possible problems associated with this kind of collaboration.
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 3, No. 6 (July 1976)
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 3, No. 6 (July 1976)
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Issue Editors: DR. ROBERT CREEN, School of Social Work - UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT, DR. FLORENCE KASLOW, HAHNEMANN MEDICAL COLLEGE
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Editorial - pp. 620
- The Family - 100 Years of Neglect - FRANK J. MONTEMURO, Jr - pp. 622
- Crime Victims and Public Policy - JOE HUDSON, BURT GALAWAY - pp. 629
- The Dysfunctional Dialectics of the Prison - RICHARD A. BALL - pp. 636
- The Death Penalty and Discretion: Implications of the FURMAN Decision For Criminal Justice - MARC RIEDEL - pp. 649
- Educating Social Workers For Evolving Roles In Corrections - FLORENCE KASLOW, STEWART WARNER - …
Crime Victims And Public Social Policy, Joe Hudson, Burt Galaway
Crime Victims And Public Social Policy, Joe Hudson, Burt Galaway
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The administration of criminal law has traditionally Ignored the role of the victim and focused on the criminal offender. Increasingly, however, social policy and programs are beginning to take Into consideration the situation of the crime victim. Programs designed to focus on offender restitution to crime victims are being developed and Implemented at various stages of the criminal Justice system. At the same time, programs of state compensation to crime victims are being Implemented in an Increasing number of jurisdictions.
The Death Penalty And Discretion: Implications Of The Furman Decision For Criminal Justice, Marc Riedel
The Death Penalty And Discretion: Implications Of The Furman Decision For Criminal Justice, Marc Riedel
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Whether the deatn penalty should remain as a penalty available in American criminal law continues to be a subject of controversy among social scientists, lawyers, the judiciary and the public. While the traditional areas of debate over whether the death penalty is a deterrent and whether it is imposed ina discriminatory manner continue to be important issues, the recent Supreme Court decision (Furman v Georgia, 1972) and subsequent legislation has introduced another dimension: the nature and use of discretion.
Current litigation on the death penalty (Fowler v North Carolina, 1974) is directed toward a resolution of issues raised by Furman. …
Educating Social Workers For Evolving Roles In Corrections, Florence Kaslow, Stewart Werner
Educating Social Workers For Evolving Roles In Corrections, Florence Kaslow, Stewart Werner
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The sought after concept of "socialized justice" toward which we aspire will hopefully emerge a reality in the Twentieth Century. The pendulum swings from the public's indignation and outrage toward the violent and heinous crimes of our times to the advance of modern correctional methods and techniques stimulated by changing social forces and federally funded programs; the humanization of our prisons, facilities and field services is the result. Gains are being made which are beginning to be felt, in which prescribed treatment programs tailored to meet the needs of the individual are beginning to pay dividends. This advance speaks to …
Indigenous Correctional Paraprofessionals: "Bourgeois Nigger Or Empathetic Worker?" - A Brief Position Paper, Robert J. Wicks
Indigenous Correctional Paraprofessionals: "Bourgeois Nigger Or Empathetic Worker?" - A Brief Position Paper, Robert J. Wicks
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Employment of paraprofessionals in correctional settings is no longer considered to be a controversial experiment. Their involvement in institutional and community-based programs is expected today. To utilize only professionals such as social workers, psychologists, psychiatrists, and penologists is considered to be an outdated waste of available personnel. A number of recent, comprehensive reports have borne this out (Gartner, 1971; Sobey, 1970; Arnhoff & Rubenstein, 1969; Grosser, Henry & Kelly, 1969).
Police As Social Service Workers?, Robert Green
Police As Social Service Workers?, Robert Green
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
This is a subject area that is not easily or directly approached, for the state of the knowledge rests primarily upon educated guesses, intuitive hunches and intellectual speculation. Little hard empirical data is available. We are still trying to determine how many police departments we have, let alone understand them. The most extensive surve of the criminal justice system ever attempted in this country concluded in 1967 that we had more than 40,000 departments (President's Commission, 1967). Using more sophisticated sampling techniques, L.E.A.A. reported in 1970 that the number was closer to 14,900; by 1975, however, varying its sampled population …
Community Milieu Approach: Resource For Criminal Justice System, Jack Sarmanian, Peter Knox
Community Milieu Approach: Resource For Criminal Justice System, Jack Sarmanian, Peter Knox
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Never before in our history has there been such a need for sophisticated programming to deal with the deviant patterns of behavior that are becoming so prevalent in our society. Violent acting out, and a myriad of other self-destructive and socially unacceptable behaviors are emerging which demand immediate attention. This article is devoted to describing the approach of a community-based counseling/rehabilitative program that has responded to the dilemma.
Adolescent Counseling in Development was created several years ago to answer the specific need of a community experiencing a tremendous increase in the use and abuse of drugs. The program has continued …
A Rehabilitation Model For The Adult Offender, Morton Zivan
A Rehabilitation Model For The Adult Offender, Morton Zivan
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
In the face of ever-increasing crime rates, corrections has come under considerable criticism, simultaneously being called too lenient by same and too harsh by others. The historical facts clearly shrew that corrections has been a monolithic and simplistic response to one of our most complex social problems. Retributive punishment has been the single guiding objective, and incarceration has been the principal medium. That this approach has been a multi-billion dollar unmitigatedly tragic failure is evidenced by the fact that of the 90% of offenders who ultimately return to the cammunity after release from prison, an estimated 65% recidivate (U.S. Dept. …
An Examination Of "Right To Treatment" Standards: Mental Health Policy Within The Context Of The State Hospital System, Kathryn Glass
An Examination Of "Right To Treatment" Standards: Mental Health Policy Within The Context Of The State Hospital System, Kathryn Glass
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
This paper discusses the use of court-imposed standards for public mental hospitals as a method of improving public mental health services. The standards set out in Wyatt v. Stickney are examined, and the author concludes that if implemented nationally such standards would transform the public hospitals. In addition, implementation would alter the power structure of mental health workers, effect the allocation of state and federal funds, and influence the larger system of mental health services. Socio-economic characteristics of public mental hospital patients, and an assessment of present care in this system are presented as central issues in mental health policy …
Dilemmas Of Planning And Self-Determination, Charles D. Cowger
Dilemmas Of Planning And Self-Determination, Charles D. Cowger
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Self-determination is examined as the premier social work value. It is argued in this paper that the positive or negative impact of planning is dependent on who is planning what for whom, and that not planning may be a more serious threat to self-determination than planning.
The Welfare Poor: Patterns Of Association And Interaction In Discretionary Time, Francis P. Noe, Kirk Elifson
The Welfare Poor: Patterns Of Association And Interaction In Discretionary Time, Francis P. Noe, Kirk Elifson
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The welfare poor in America are classified into a "subterranean' strata not solely because of economic inequality but entrenched by racial ethnicity, age disadvantages, physical and psychological impairment, and broken family structures. While the misery and plight of the poor are often recognized in basic terms in which the survival necessity of food, clothing, health care, and shelter are real concerns, seemingly other less important cultural considerations are glossed over as trivia. Leisure participation continues to be neglected by researchers and because of this low priority, little or nothing is known of the leisure life style of the poor. Less …
Differential Utilization Of The Health Care Delivery System By Members Of Ethnic Minorities, Patricia A. Brown
Differential Utilization Of The Health Care Delivery System By Members Of Ethnic Minorities, Patricia A. Brown
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Research and statistical reports of the 1960's strongly attested to the underutilization of the health care delivery system by members of ethnic minorities. For example, a 1968 national report on hospital utilization showed that a larger proportion of white persons was hospitalized than were persons of 'color.'I This was found to be true regardless of sex and age; but "... as family income increased, the rate for white persons and those of other races became closer." This fact not withstanding, each income level saw whites using hospitalization more than persons of 'color.' Reasons for this difference in utilization were offered …
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 3, No. 5 (May 1976)
Journal Of Sociology & Social Welfare Vol. 3, No. 5 (May 1976)
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- An Examination of "Right to Treatment" Standards: Mental Health Policy Within The Context of The State Hospital System - KATHRYN GLASS - pp.492
- Differential Utilization of the Health Care Delivery System by Members of Ethnic Minorities - PATRICIA A. BROWN - pp.516
- Community Planning Organizations Coping With Their Problems: The Case of The Welfare Council - FRED M. COX, JOHN E. TROPMAN - pp.524
- Community Organization Practice: An Elaboration of Rothman's Typology - JERRY D. STOCKDALE - pp.541
- Dilemmas of Planning and Self-Determination - CHARLES D. COWGER - pp. 552
- The Practice Implications of Interorganizational Theory For …
Community Planning Organizations Coping With Their Problems: The Case Of The Welfare Council, Fred M. Cox, John E. Tropman
Community Planning Organizations Coping With Their Problems: The Case Of The Welfare Council, Fred M. Cox, John E. Tropman
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Community welfare councils, sharply attacked in the 1960's, have survived, while many of their competitors have lost ground. Understanding their survival may help community planning agencies and planners. This study combines data from a survey of community welfare councils with data from a longitudinal study of a single council. The basic problem of councils is conceptualized as value precariousness, following Clark and Selznick, and data are provided that tend to confirm the existence of this problem among councils. The ways in which councils cope with the problem are described in some detail. Finally, the findings are compared with three similar …
Upward Mobility Potential Attitudes Toward Mental Illness And Working-Class Youth, Gary Rosenberg, Honey A. Mendelson
Upward Mobility Potential Attitudes Toward Mental Illness And Working-Class Youth, Gary Rosenberg, Honey A. Mendelson
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The investigators were interested in assessing the relationship between upward mobility potential and attitudes toward mental illness. For the 147 male adolescents studied, it was hypothesized that those working-class youth who demonstrated a high predictability of future upward social mobility would score more liberally on the five factors of the Opinions about Mental Illness Scale than those working-class youth who demonstrated a low predictability of future upward social mobility. Through the use of the aforementioned scale, the Otis Quick Scoring Mental Ability Test and Zero Order Correlations, the hypothesized relationship was confirmed; i.e., the upwardly mobile group was significantly more …
The Living Together Arrangement: Social Work And The Lost Client, Robert W. Weinbach, Anne C. Blankenship, Sarah M. Friedman, Judy C. Rutledge, Claudia A. Thompson
The Living Together Arrangement: Social Work And The Lost Client, Robert W. Weinbach, Anne C. Blankenship, Sarah M. Friedman, Judy C. Rutledge, Claudia A. Thompson
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
A recent research study suggests that persons living together outside of marriage do not view social work services as a potential source of help for problems brought into the living together arrangement, those common to all intimate long-range dyadic relationships or those directly related to choice of lifestyle. A multi-faceted approach is suggested which would aim at reaching this potential client group in a climate which will neither stigmatize or judge the alternate lifestyle or the persons who practice it.
The Practice Implications Of Interorganizational Theory For Services Integration, Nancy Runkle Hooyman
The Practice Implications Of Interorganizational Theory For Services Integration, Nancy Runkle Hooyman
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
The interorganizational theories of Litwak and Rothman and Levine and White are utilized to suggest the need for practitioners, involved in services integration efforts, to consider the situational variables of size, resources, awareness of interdependence, and type of task exchanged. The effect of these variables upon the formality and autonomy of linkage mechanisms between human service agencies is illustrated in terms of a regional services integration project in Minnesota. Implications are presented for practitioners who are attempting to coordinate services.
Community Organization Practice: An Elaboration Of Rothman's Typology, Jerry D. Stockdale
Community Organization Practice: An Elaboration Of Rothman's Typology, Jerry D. Stockdale
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
Four change approaches encompass much purposive social change at the community level: locality development, traditional planning, advocacy planning and social action. Locality development and traditional planning are similar on at least six dimensions, as are advocacy planning and social action. On two other dimensions similarities exist between locality development and social action and between traditional planning and advocacy planning. If social change practitioners are to select the most effective strategies for the situations in which they will act, it is essential that they understand the characteristics and assumptions of these approaches.
Consultation As A Mode Of Field Instruction, Frank B. Raymond
Consultation As A Mode Of Field Instruction, Frank B. Raymond
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare
In recent years both pedagogical and pragmatic considerations have prompted numerous experiments in field instruction for social work education. A novel approach used by one school is based on a consultation model. In this mode of field instruction a faculty based field instructor serves as a consultant to the student placed in a community agency. The relationship between consultee and consultant is distinctly different from that which exists between a student and a "teacher," "instructor," or "supervisor" in traditional field placements. Rather than a hierarchical, obligatory relationship, there exists between consultant and consultee a coordinate, facultative relationship in which the …
A Study Of The Relationship Of Cognitive Similarity To Communication Accuracy, Shirley C. Woodworth
A Study Of The Relationship Of Cognitive Similarity To Communication Accuracy, Shirley C. Woodworth
Dissertations
No abstract provided.
Alcoholics In The Mental Hospital: The Effect Of Admission Path, Arthur Anderson
Alcoholics In The Mental Hospital: The Effect Of Admission Path, Arthur Anderson
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
The Effect Of Attending Behavior Training On Performance Of A Paired Color Discrimination Task, Stephen Michael Aggas
The Effect Of Attending Behavior Training On Performance Of A Paired Color Discrimination Task, Stephen Michael Aggas
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
The Relationship Between Styles Of Super Vision And Needs Satisfaction Of Two Levels Of Management Employees, John Hodge
The Relationship Between Styles Of Super Vision And Needs Satisfaction Of Two Levels Of Management Employees, John Hodge
Dissertations
No abstract provided.
A Validation Of Tests For Selection Of Office Workers At Western Michigan University, Allen E. Doolittle
A Validation Of Tests For Selection Of Office Workers At Western Michigan University, Allen E. Doolittle
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.