This groundbreaking new book illustrates how the internet and other electronic resources are currently affecting social work practice. Rapidly emerging technologies have facilitated economic globalization and created a host of new issues for social workers to address. At the same time these technologies have become key tools for social activism and advocacy. Practitioners must understand the changes in social policy advocacy and community activism that these technological advances bring and learn to formulate new skills to utilize them to their advantage. Advocacy, Activism, and the Internet…mehr
This groundbreaking new book illustrates how the internet and other electronic resources are currently affecting social work practice. Rapidly emerging technologies have facilitated economic globalization and created a host of new issues for social workers to address. At the same time these technologies have become key tools for social activism and advocacy. Practitioners must understand the changes in social policy advocacy and community activism that these technological advances bring and learn to formulate new skills to utilize them to their advantage. Advocacy, Activism, and the Internet discusses the use of the internet as a tool for instigating social change at the local, state, national, and international levels. The authors show how technology affects social work practice directly through new methods and indirectly by affecting the communities that practitioners serve. It provides channels for e-advocacy as well as a thorough exploration of the major theoretical, practice, and research perspectives that inform electronic activism. This book solidly integrates new on-line advocacy skills with traditional methods and unites research on internet communities with macro social work theory.
Steven Hick is an associate professor in the School of Social Work at Carleton University. His published books include Land Our Life: a Study of the Struggle for Agrarian Reform in the Philippines (1987), Human rights and the Internet (2000), and Social Work in Canada: An Introduction (2002). John McNutt is a professor of Urban Affairs at the University of Delaware. His research is in the area of advocacy and activism on the Internet, and he has previously edited The Global Environmental Crisis: Implications for Social Welfare and Social Work (1994). He has also written Generalist Practice in Larger Settings: Knowledge and Skill Concepts and Social Policy Analysis and Practice, both published by Lyceum Books.
Inhaltsangabe
* Foreword: The Internet, Society and Activism * Preface * Chapter 1 Communities and Advocacy on the Internet: A Conceptual Framework * Part 1 Community Organizing and Advocacy and the Internet: An Introduction * Chapter 2 Social Work Advocacy and the Internet: Research Findings and Future Directions * Chapter 3 Can You Have Community On the Net? * Chapter 4 Public Policy, Technology, and the Nonprofit Sector: Notes from the Field * Chapter 5 The Role of The Internet in Educating Social Work Practitioners as Online Advocates * Part 2: Organizing for Social Change * Chapter 6 Organizing for Social Change: Online and Traditional Community Practice * Chapter 7 NetActivism 2001: How citizens Use the Internet * Chapter 8 Environmental Activism on the Internet * Chapter 9 Organizing Women of Color Online * Chapter 10 Dial Up Networking for Debt Cancellation and Development: A Case Study of Jubilee 2000 * Chapter 11 Online Collaboration, Information and the Resourceful Community * Chapter 12 Technology-based Groups and Flash Campaigns * Part 3 Social Policy and Community in an Information Society: Implications for Advocacy and Organizing * Chapter 13 Social Policy Advocacy in Cyberspace * Chapter 14 Social Policy and Social Change in the Post-industrial Society * Chapter 15 Tele-democracy: Re-inventing Governance for Social Welfare * Chapter 16 Inequality and the Digital Divide: Myths and Realities * Chapter 17 The Global Information Divide and Online Organizing for International Development * Chapter 18 Cyberadvocacy as Social Work Practice: The Continuing Challenge to Reinvent the Profession
* Foreword: The Internet, Society and Activism * Preface * Chapter 1 Communities and Advocacy on the Internet: A Conceptual Framework * Part 1 Community Organizing and Advocacy and the Internet: An Introduction * Chapter 2 Social Work Advocacy and the Internet: Research Findings and Future Directions * Chapter 3 Can You Have Community On the Net? * Chapter 4 Public Policy, Technology, and the Nonprofit Sector: Notes from the Field * Chapter 5 The Role of The Internet in Educating Social Work Practitioners as Online Advocates * Part 2: Organizing for Social Change * Chapter 6 Organizing for Social Change: Online and Traditional Community Practice * Chapter 7 NetActivism 2001: How citizens Use the Internet * Chapter 8 Environmental Activism on the Internet * Chapter 9 Organizing Women of Color Online * Chapter 10 Dial Up Networking for Debt Cancellation and Development: A Case Study of Jubilee 2000 * Chapter 11 Online Collaboration, Information and the Resourceful Community * Chapter 12 Technology-based Groups and Flash Campaigns * Part 3 Social Policy and Community in an Information Society: Implications for Advocacy and Organizing * Chapter 13 Social Policy Advocacy in Cyberspace * Chapter 14 Social Policy and Social Change in the Post-industrial Society * Chapter 15 Tele-democracy: Re-inventing Governance for Social Welfare * Chapter 16 Inequality and the Digital Divide: Myths and Realities * Chapter 17 The Global Information Divide and Online Organizing for International Development * Chapter 18 Cyberadvocacy as Social Work Practice: The Continuing Challenge to Reinvent the Profession
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