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  1. Home /
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  3. Vol. 24 No. 1 (2022): Advances in Social Work & Welfare Education

Vol. 24 No. 1 (2022): Advances in Social Work & Welfare Education

Published: 2023-01-24

Editorial

  • Collaboration for innovative practice

    Nada Eltaiba
    • PDF

Full Articles

  • Negotiating difference in social work practice: Role of cultural competence

    Yayoi Ide, Michael O'Brien , Liz Beddoe
    • PDF
  • Decolonising self-care in social work from an Afro-Brazilian perspective: The self-intertwined with collective care

    Sharlotte Tusasiirwe, Iris Silva Brito
    • PDF
  • Child Welfare Social Workers’ Decision-Making Challenges Associated with Clinical Practice, Organisational, and Sociopolitical Factors

    Deo Mshigeni, Ph.D., Moosgar Borieux, Ph.D.
    • PDF

Reflective Narrative

  • A Student’s Reflection on Participating in a Non-Traditional Social Work Field Placement During the Covid-19 Pandemic

    Jaimie Barry
    • PDF
  • Child sexual exploitation – Changing the narrative: A critical review of practice in Aotearoa New Zealand

    Sarah Elliott, Charlotte Chisnell
    • PDF

Teaching Notes

  • The Role of Social Work Education to Address Environmental and Racial Injustice

    Kelly Smith, Melissa Singh, Nicole Pearl
    • PDF
  • The experience of teaching a Bachelor's level social work practice course for the first time in the context of Covid-19

    Jack Makolewski, Karen Lok Yi Wong
    • PDF

Book Review

  • Offla’s Children: A Family Memoir

    Dorothy Scott
    • PDF

The Advances in Social Work & Welfare Education journal recognise the lands on which we meet, as places of learning, teaching and scholarship from time immemorial.  We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders as the First Nations peoples and custodians of Country and waters now known as Australia.  We acknowledge Maori as tangata whenua of Aotearoa New Zealand.  We pay respect to these ancient living cultures that are unique, valued and connected to their lands, sun, wind and waters. We commit to honour and respect the First Nations knowledge holders and Senior people, the Elders past and present; and to honour and respect tupuna. In a spirit of unity and respect, we strive to provide an inclusive forum for the many multi-cultural voices that now contribute to the understanding of our environments, our communities and ourselves, so they can be heard and heralded in academic circles and to better inform our practice. 

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