1st Edition

Social Work with Families Perceptions of Social Casework Among Clients of a Family Service Unit

By Eric Sainsbury Copyright 1975

    Originally published in 1975 and based on a study of the memories and perceptions of twenty-seven families known to a Family Service Unit, and of their most recent social workers, this book was an important contribution to our knowledge of consumer opinions of the social services at the time. In particular, it draws attention to factors relevant to the evaluation of social work practice and to the definition of success.

    The family members describe for themselves, by means of extracts from tape-recorded interviews, what it feels like to have problems, to be referred for help – in short, to be a ‘client’. They give an account of the help they have received and define the personal attributes and activities which they have found helpful and appropriate in social workers.

    This book would have been of special value to social workers, to social work students, and to all those concerned with social policy and administration. Today it can be read in its historical context.

    General Editor’s Introduction.  Acknowledgments.  1. The Origins of the Study  2. Meeting the Families  3. Referral, Intake and Help at the Point of Crisis  4. Continuing Help  5. Memories of the Duration of Contact in Relation to the Families’ Preferences for Particular Social Workers  6. Relationships between Families and Social Workers  7. Changes in the Families Lives  8. ‘Good’ and ‘Successful’ Work  9. Summary, Conclusions and Suggestions.  Appendix.  Bibliography.  Index.

    Biography

    Eric Sainsbury