Trabajo social y el ambiente: Comprendiendo a las personas y el lugar.

Autores

  • Michael Kim Zapf University of Calgary

Palavras-chave:

Trabajo social; ambiente

Resumo

Como profesión con un enfoque declarado hace mucho tiempo en la persona en el ambiente, se podría esperar que el trabajo social desempeñe un rol de liderazgo en los esfuerzos interdisciplinarios para abordar las amenazas ambientales al bienestar humano y su existencia continua, sin embargo, la profesión generalmente ha permanecido en silencio o menos relevante. Este trabajo explora las negligencias pasadas y presentes del ambiente natural dentro del trabajo social convencional. Se examina la prolongada perspectiva de la persona en el ambiente en busca de limitaciones que inhiben la comprensión de los problemas ambientales y el desarrollo de estrategias efectivas. Se consideran entendimientos alternativos del ambiente desde especializaciones dentro de la profesión y disciplinas relacionadas. El trabajo concluye con indicaciones hacia nuevos modelos de práctica incorporando una visión de las personas como el lugar que pueden ayudarnos hacia una misión más amplia de aprender a vivir bien en un lugar.

Biografia Autor

Michael Kim Zapf, University of Calgary

Profesor emérito de Trabajo Social, U. Cagary, Canadá.

Referências

Architecture for Humanity (Eds.) (2006). Design like you give a damn: Architectural responses to humanitarian crises. London: Metropolis Books (Thames & Hudson).

Bastien, B. (2004). Blackfoot ways of knowing: The worldview of the Siksikaitsitapi. Calgary: University of Calgary Press.

Battiste, M. & Henderson, J.Y. (2000). Protecting Indigenous knowledge and heritage: A global challenge. Saskatoon: Purich.

Berger, R.M. (1995). Habitat destruction syndrome. Social Work, 40(4), 441-443.

Berger, R. M., & Kelly, J. J. (1993). Social work in the ecological crisis. Social Work, 38(5), 521-526.

Bonnes, M., & Bonaiuto, M. (2002). Environmental psychology: From spatial-physical environment to sustainable development. In R.B. Bechtel (Ed.), Handbook of environmental psychology (pp. 28-54). New York: John Wiley & sons.

Cajete, G. (2000). Native science: Natural laws of interdependence. Santa Fe: Clear Light Publishers.

Canda, E.R. (1988). Spirituality, diversity, and social work practice. Social Casework, 69(4), 238-247.

Canda, E.R. (1998). Afterword: Linking spirituality and social work: Five themes for innovation. In E.R. Canda (Ed.), Spirituality in social work: New directions (pp. 97-106). New York: Haworth Press.

Canda, E.R., & Furman, L.D. (1999). Spiritual diversity in social work practice: The heart of helping. New York: Free Press.

Castellano, M. (2006). Ethics and excellence in Aboriginal research. The Honourable Justice Michael O’Byrne/AHFMR Lecture in Law, Medicine, and Ethics (April 16). University of Calgary.

Chatwin, B. (1987). The songlines. New York: Penguin Books.

Cheers, B. (2004). The place of care – rural human services on the fringe. Rural Social Work, 9, 9-22.

Coates, J. (2003). Ecology and social work: Toward a new paradigm. Halifax: Fernwood.

Collier, K. (2006). Social work with rural peoples (3rd ed.). Vancouver: New Star.

Colorado, P. (1991). A meeting between brothers – indigenous science. Interview with J. Carroll. Beshara, 13, 20-27.

Compton, B.R., Galaway, B., & Cournoyer, B.R. (2005). Social work processes (7th ed.). Belmont: Brooks/Cole (Thomson Learning).

Drover, G. (2000). Redefining social citizenship in a global era. Canadian Social Work Review, 2(1), [Special Issue – Social Work and Globalization], 29-49.

Evernden, N. (1985). The natural alien: Humankind and environment. University of Toronto Press.

Gamble, D.N., & Weil, M.O. (1997). Sustainable development: The challenge for community development. Community Development Journal, 32(3), 210-222.

Garvin, C.D., & Seabury, B.A. (1997). Interpersonal practice in social work: Promoting competence and social justice (2nd ed.). Needham Heights: Allyn & Bacon.

Germain, C.B. (1981). The physical environment and social work practice. In A.N. Maluccio (Ed.), Promoting competence in clients: A new/old approach to social work practice (pp. 103-124). New York: Free Press.

Gilgun, J.F. (2005). An ecosystemic approach to assessment. In B.R. Compton, B. Galaway, & B.R. Cournoyer (Eds.), Social work processes (7th ed.) (pp. 349-360). Belmont: Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning.

Ginsberg, L.H. (Ed.) (1998). Social work in rural communities (3rd ed.). New York: Council on Social Work Education (CSWE).

Gordon, W.E. (1969). Basic concepts for an integrative and generative conception of social work. In G. Hearn (Ed.), The general systems approach: Contributions towards an holistic conception of social work (pp. 5-11). New York: Council on Social Work Education.

Gordon, W.E. (1981). A natural classification system for social work literature and knowledge. Social Work, 26(2), 134-138.

Gore, A. (2006). An inconvenient truth: The planetary emergency of global warming and what we can do about it. New York: Rodale.

Gorobets, A. (2006). An eco-social approach to sustainable community development. Community Development Journal, 41(1), 104-108.

Graham, J.R., Swift, K.J., & Delaney, R. (2009). Canadian social policy: An introduction (3rd ed.). Toronto: Pearson Education Canada.

Graveline, F.J. (1998). Circle works: Transforming Eurocentric consciousness. Halifax: Fernwood Publishing.

Gutheil, I.A. (1992). Considering the physical environment: An essential component of good practice. Social Work, 37(5), 391-396.

Haas, T., & Nachtigal, P. (1998). Place value: An educator’s guide to good literature on rural lifeways, environments, and purposes of education. Charleston, West Virginia: Clearinghouse on Rural Education and Small Schools (Appalachia Educational Laboratory).

Hart, M.A. (2002). Seeking mino-pimatisiwin: An Aboriginal approach to helping. Halifax: Fernwood.

Hawley, A.H. (1986). Human ecology: A theoretical essay. University of Chicago Press.

Heinonen, T., & Spearman, L. (2006). Social work practice: Problem solving and beyond (2nd ed.). Toronto: Nelson (Thomson Canada).

Hillier, J., & Rooksby, E. (Eds.) (2005). Habitus: A sense of place (2nd ed.). Aldershot: Ashgate.

Hoff, M.D., & McNutt, J.G. (Eds.) (1994). The global environmental crisis: Implications for social welfare and social work. Aldershot: Ashgate

Hoff, M.D., & Polack, R.J. (1993). Social dimensions of the environmental crisis: Challenges for social work. Social Work, 38(2), 204-211.

Hull, G.H., Jr. & Kirst-Ashman, K.K. (2004). The generalist model of human services practice. Pacific Grove: Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning.

IFSW. (2004). International policy statement on globalization and the environment (approved by IFSW 2004). Available [http://www.ifsw.org], retrieved March 2007.

Latta, A. (2007). Environmental citizenship: A model linking ecology with social justice could lead to a more equitable future. Alternatives: Canadian Environmental Ideas & Action, 33(1), 18-19.

Lehmann, P., & Coady, N. (2001). Theoretical perspectives for direct social work practice: A generalist-eclectic approach. New York: Springer.

Matthies, A.L., Nahri, K., & Ward, D. (eds.) (2001). The eco-social approach in social work. Jyvaskyla (Finland): Sophi.

McCormack, P. (1998). Native homelands as cultural landscape: Decentering the wilderness paradigm. In J. Oakes, R. Riewe, K. Kinew, & E. Maloney (Eds.), Sacred lands: Aboriginal world views, claims, and conflicts (pp. 25-32). Edmonton: Canadian Circumpolar Institute (University of Alberta).

McGaa, E. (1990). Mother Earth spirituality: Native American paths to healing ourselves and our world. San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco.

McGee, H., & Patterson, D. (2007, May 6). Talk dirt to me. New York Times Living Magazine (final edition), 76.

Meadowcroft, J. (2007). Building the environmental state: What the history of social welfare tells us about the future of environmental policy. Alternatives: Canadian Environmental Ideas & Action, 33(1), 11-17.

Miley, K.K., O’Melia, M., & DuBois, B. (2004). Generalist social work practice: An empowering approach (4th ed.). Boston: Pearson Education.

Morito, B. (2002). Thinking ecologically: Environmental thought, values and policy. Halifax: Fernwood.

Nahri, K. (2004). The eco-social approach in social work and the challenges to ethe expertise of social work. Doctoral dissertation, University of Jyvaskyla (Finland). Available http://dissertations.jyu.fi/studeduc/9513918343.pdf

National Association of Social Workers (NASW). (2000). Social work speaks: NASW policy statements. Washington: NASW Press.

Neugeboren, B. (1996). Environmental practice in the human services: Integration of micro and macro roles, skills, and contexts. New York: Haworth Press.

Norton, W. (2004). Human geography (5th ed.). Don Mills: Oxford University Press.

Orr, D.W. (1992). Ecological literacy: Education and the transition to a postmodern world. Albany: State University of New York Press.

Orr, D.W. (1994). Earth in mind: On education, environment and the human prospect. Washington: Island Press.

Ortega y Gasset, J. (1985). Meditations on hunting. New York: Scribners.

Pincus, A., & Minahan, A. (1973). Social work practice: Model and method. Itasca: Peacock.

Poulin, J. (2005). Strengths-based generalist practice: A collaborative approach (2nd ed.). Belmont: Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning.

Richmond, M. (1922). What is social work? New York: Russell Sage Foundation.

Rosenhek, R. (2006). Earth, spirit, and action: The deep ecology movement as spiritual engagement. The Trumpeter: Journal of Ecosophy, 22(2), 90-95.

Roszak, T. (1972). Where the wasteland ends. Garden City: Doubleday.

Schmidt, G. (2005). Geographic context and northern child welfare practice. In K. Brownlee & J.R. Graham (Eds.), Violence in the family: Social work readings and research from northern and rural Canada (pp. 16-29). Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.

Sheafor, B.W., & Horejsi, C.R. (2006). Techniques and guidelines for social work practice (7th ed.). Boston: Pearson Education.

Shelemay, K.K. (2001) Soundscapes: Exploring music in a changing world. New York: Norton.

Spretnak, C. (1991). States of grace: The recovery of meaning in the postmodern age. New York: Harper Collins.

Stuart, P.H. (2004). Social welfare and rural people: From the colonial era to the present. In T.L. Scales & C.L. Streeter (Eds.), Rural social work: Building and sustaining community assets (pp. 21-33). Belmont: Brooks/Cole/Thomson Learning.

Suopajarvi, L. (1998). Regional identity in Finnish Lapland. Paper presented at the Third International Congress of Arctic Social Sciences, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Ungar, M. (2002). A deeper, more social ecological social work practice. Social Service Review, 76(3), 480-497.

United Nations World Commission on Environment and Development (Brundtland Commission). (1987). Our common future. New York: Oxford University Press.

Van Wormer, K., Besthorn, F.H., & Keefe, T. (2007). Human behavior and the social environment: Macro level – groups, communities, and organizations. New York: Oxford University Press.

Weick, A. (1981). Reframing the person-in-environment perspective. Social Work, 26(2), 140-145.

Wenders, W. (2001). A sense of place (talk at Princeton University). Available: [www.wim_wenders.com/news_reel/2001/0103princeton.htm]. Retrieved February 26, 2007.

Whiteley, S. (2004). Introduction. In S. Whiteley, A. Bennet, & S. Hawkins, (Eds.), Music, space and place: Popular music and cultural identity (pp. 1-22). Aldershot: Ashgate.

Witherspoon, G. (1977). Language and art in the Navajo universe. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Yelaja, S.A. (1985). Concepts of social work practice. In S.A. Yelaja (Ed.), An introduction to social work practice in Canada. Scarborough: Prentice Hall.

Zalitack, J. (2005, February 7). Over to you: I can say whatever I want. Maclean’s, 118(6), 49.

Zapf, M.K. (2002). Geography and Canadian social work practice. In F.J. Turner (Ed.), Social work practice: A Canadian perspective (2nd ed.) (pp. 69-83). Toronto: Pearson Education Canada.

Zapf, M.K. (2005). The spiritual dimension of person and environment: Perspectives from social work and traditional knowledge. International Social Work, 48(5), 633-642.

Zapf, M.K. (2009). Social work and the environment: Understanding people and place. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.

Zastrow, C. (2004). Introduction to social work and social welfare: Empowering people (8th ed.). Belmont: Thomson Brooks/Cole.

Publicado

2022-07-06

Como Citar

Kim Zapf, M. (2022). Trabajo social y el ambiente: Comprendiendo a las personas y el lugar . Transformación Socio-Espacial, 2(01). Obtido de https://revistas.ubiobio.cl/index.php/TSE/article/view/5505

Edição

Secção

Traducciones