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More than place-based [electronic resource] : Viewing geography on a continuum and the implications for social work practice /

by Carbone, Jason T; McMillin, Stephen Edward.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleDescription: pp. 121-133.Online resources: Click here to access full-text article In: Families in society: the journal of contemporary social services 2018, Vol. 99, No. 2Summary: Communities play an important role within the field of social work as the context within which specific social work activities occur. To date, much of the social work literature divides communities into the mutually exclusive, dichotomous categories of geographic and functional communities. The authors propose a new method for defining community that views geography on a continuum and suggests that membership within a community is moderated by place. The concept of place-moderated communities is applied to specific examples, and the application to social work practice is discussed within the context of community membership, community engagement, community rights, and community development efforts.
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Communities play an important role within the field of social work as the context within which specific social work activities occur. To date, much of the social work literature divides communities into the mutually exclusive, dichotomous categories of geographic and functional communities. The authors propose a new method for defining community that views geography on a continuum and suggests that membership within a community is moderated by place. The concept of place-moderated communities is applied to specific examples, and the application to social work practice is discussed within the context of community membership, community engagement, community rights, and community development efforts.

Mode of access: Internet.


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