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Your search for all content returned 12 results

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  • Restorative Justice and Community Well-Being: Visualizing Theories, Practices, and Research—Part 1Go to chapter: Restorative Justice and Community Well-Being: Visualizing Theories, Practices, and Research—Part 1

    Restorative Justice and Community Well-Being: Visualizing Theories, Practices, and Research—Part 1

    Chapter

    This chapter introduces the theoretical basis for restorative justice (RJ). It assesses the empirical evidence for RJ programs, and explores the challenges and opportunities associated with applying core competencies. The chapter describes competencies of specific interest which include: engaging diversity and difference in practice, and engaging with individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities. It also discusses skills essential to the success of RJ which include supporting processes that value the experiences of people associated with a crime or harm. The chapter suggests the importance of practical and context-specific knowledge and skills relevant when individuals, families, groups, organizations, and communities find themselves in conflict and require support. Programs that rely upon restorative principles have been used at a variety of points in the criminal justice process. The chapter discusses a practice, a family group conference, which was first developed in New Zealand involving social workers considerably.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Family Engagement and Social Work in Statutory SettingsGo to chapter: Family Engagement and Social Work in Statutory Settings

    Family Engagement and Social Work in Statutory Settings

    Chapter

    This chapter discusses the concepts, underlying principles, benefits, and challenges of using “whole-family” approaches in social work. It articulates the theory and skills associated with family engagement as part of a human rights and social justice framework for social work practice in forensic settings. The chapter describes the ethical imperatives and evidence base supporting the use of family group decision making (FGDM) in regulatory settings. It engages whole families as partners in the use of FGDM in child protection and youth justice. The chapter also describes the theory, empirical support, and skills in use of FGDM, or family group conferencing (FGC). It concluded with an example of how alert forensic social workers must be to the potential for their best intentions to collide with the tenants of responsive practice and a quote from a child protection social worker who worked closely with the author on a pilot project using FGC.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Thinking Outside the Box: Tackling Health Inequities Through Forensic Social Work PracticeGo to chapter: Thinking Outside the Box: Tackling Health Inequities Through Forensic Social Work Practice

    Thinking Outside the Box: Tackling Health Inequities Through Forensic Social Work Practice

    Chapter

    This chapter emphasizes the importance of improving health literacy. It describes the incorporation of cultural competence standards in forensic social work practice perspectives. The chapter also explains how to promote engagement of informal support networks in promoting health and well-being among diverse groups. Disadvantaged racial and ethnic minorities in the United States have long been overrepresented in the criminal justice systems. The elimination of health care disparities and ensuring the health care delivery system is responsive to minority groups is a social justice issue. The roles and function of forensic social workers that provide services to persons with these cultural norms can be expanded using a broader ecological framework and the applied social care model to develop intervention strategies and care plans with incarceration persons. Identifying and incorporating culturally appropriate practice approaches are challenging, yet necessary undertakings for forensic social workers.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Intersectoral Collaboration: Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and Homelessness Among Vulnerable PopulationsGo to chapter: Intersectoral Collaboration: Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and Homelessness Among Vulnerable Populations

    Intersectoral Collaboration: Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and Homelessness Among Vulnerable Populations

    Chapter

    Substance abuse is a significant problem among persons who are homeless. This chapter explores the application of addiction recovery management (ARM) principles for developing practice skills in the recovery process among vulnerable populations. It examines demographic and social action factors that may impede or foster successful completion of this long-term recovery for persons who are experiencing home insecurity. The chapter offers insight for forensic social workers about how to engage diversity and differences in practice, as well as advance human rights and social, economic, and environmental justice. Analytic concepts in forensic social work can enhance the capacity of educators to prepare practitioners to be effective in closing the gap that exists for racial disparities in treatment approaches and programs. Critical race theory can be used to develop guiding principles for competency-based education and outcomes that address the gaps in existing systems of care.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Expert Witness Testimony in Forensic Practice and Justice SystemsGo to chapter: Expert Witness Testimony in Forensic Practice and Justice Systems

    Expert Witness Testimony in Forensic Practice and Justice Systems

    Chapter

    This chapter describes how forensic social workers can develop their expert witness testimony skills. It explains how to advocate on behalf of vulnerable racial and ethnic populations generally underrepresented in American legal system, to increase advocacy from a human rights perspective. The chapter explores how to use expert testimony to highlight a range of social justice issues including human trafficking, death, and persecution. It introduces forensic social workers to integrating narrative methods with evidence-based trends that can best support any legal claim for hardship. Expert witness testimony comprises core mitigation components: client interviews; collateral interviewing; obtaining institutional records; identifying core themes of hardship that have directly impacted the individual or family; identifying intergenerational patterns of illness and/or systemic traumas that impact family; identifying environmental and country conditions; writing a report; and preparing for direct testimony and cross-examination.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Empowerment and Feminist Practice With Forensic PopulationsGo to chapter: Empowerment and Feminist Practice With Forensic Populations

    Empowerment and Feminist Practice With Forensic Populations

    Chapter

    This chapter aims to disseminate theoretical and practical knowledge of practice using an empowerment and feminist perspective specifically when working with marginalized and oppressed forensic populations and in forensic settings. Forensic social work focuses on both victims and offenders, and strives to integrate the skills and knowledge of empowerment and feminist theory and practice with principles of social justice and human rights. The chapter discusses empowerment and feminist theories and their relevance to practice with forensic populations. It highlights a case example of group work with women, who were sexually abused, that was first presented in the 1990s and told from a strengths-based approach, but could very much be considered both a feminist and empowerment process of working. The chapter also highlights applying an empowerment approach to working with female and male prisoners in London.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Life Course Systems Power Analysis: Understanding Health and Justice Disparities for Forensic Assessment and InterventionGo to chapter: Life Course Systems Power Analysis: Understanding Health and Justice Disparities for Forensic Assessment and Intervention

    Life Course Systems Power Analysis: Understanding Health and Justice Disparities for Forensic Assessment and Intervention

    Chapter

    This chapter describes the life course pathways of cumulative health and justice disparities experienced by historical and emerging diverse groups, which is often found among forensic populations. It helps readers articulate a life course systems power analysis strategy for use with forensic populations and in forensic settings. The chapter demonstrates how a data-driven and evidence-based assessment and intervention plan can be used to address clinical and legal issues using case examples of an aging prison population. It uses older people in prison to illustrate the complex life course of health and social structural barriers and needs of incarcerated people who have histories of victimization and criminal convictions. Information about trauma and justice, especially related to the trauma of incarceration, which in itself is often a form of abuse, especially when frail elders are involved and they are at increased risk for victimization, medical neglect, and “resource” exploitation is presented.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Restorative Justice: What Social Workers Need to Do—Part 2Go to chapter: Restorative Justice: What Social Workers Need to Do—Part 2

    Restorative Justice: What Social Workers Need to Do—Part 2

    Chapter

    This chapter defines restorative justice and discusses the various forms that this approach to wrongdoing and offending may take. It reveals the relevance of restorative interventions to social work practice. The chapter recognizes pioneers in the field of restorative justice with special emphasis on social work theorists. It describes the various forms of restorative justice from micro level victim-offender conferencing to community-level healing circles to macro level reparative justice. The chapter argues for greater social work involvement in shaping policies that include restorative justice options in situations of wrongdoing and social work involvement in facilitating victim–offender and anti bullying conferencing. The chapter also describes aspects of restorative justice that address competencies related to advocacy for human rights and issues of spirituality.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Conceptual and Historical Overview of Forensic Social WorkGo to chapter: Conceptual and Historical Overview of Forensic Social Work

    Conceptual and Historical Overview of Forensic Social Work

    Chapter

    This chapter describes a forensic practice framework using a human rights and social justice systems approach. It articulates the definition and theme-based strategies that distinguish forensic social work from social work practice as usual. The chapter then proposes an integrated theoretical perspective that the authors refer to as a human rights and social justice systems (HR-SJS) approach. This approach helps to visualize forensic social work practice in any practice setting. The chapter also reviews the history of forensic social work using the United States as the case example to illustrate how a two-pronged approached to practice was integrated throughout this specialized arena of practice. A review of forensic social work history shows that well over 100 years ago, social workers understood that government, as author and institutor of policy, can and should be an arena for reform.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings
  • Case Level and Policy AdvocacyGo to chapter: Case Level and Policy Advocacy

    Case Level and Policy Advocacy

    Chapter

    This chapter promotes understanding of the intersection of social work case level practice skills and social welfare programs and policy. It describes the social work advocacy process, and explores how social and political values impact accessibility to social welfare programs. It assists social workers in developing competence in policy practice and in case and policy advocacy. The chapter also helps social workers recognize when social welfare and economic policies are not fairly distributed, and to become skilled in taking action at the micro-, mezzo, and/or macro level. It discusses the interaction of direct practice with case advocacy to underscore the critical need to understand and interpret policy to achieve social justice. The chapter further highlights the importance of social workers engaging in case and policy advocacy to achieve a socially just outcome for any individual or group, especially those impacted by involvement in the criminal justice system.

    Source:
    Forensic Social Work: Psychosocial and Legal Issues Across Diverse Populations and Settings

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