BJSW Advance Access published online on July 31, 2007
British Journal of Social Work, doi:10.1093/bjsw/bcm072
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1 Ghent University, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Department of Social Welfare Studies, Henri Dunantlaan 2, 9000 Gent, Belgium
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. It has become increasingly clear that the emancipatory capacity of social work has been eroded. Several scholars link this to the influence of neo-liberal and Third Way thinking. However, it has recently been argued that social work was not only a victim of these new influences, but that it is also very adaptable to the influence of such new ideas (Jordan, 2004) and not very critical about its own role in these changes (Lorenz, 2005). In this article, we will further develop this criticism, by focusing on the debate surrounding youth delinquency. According to Sharland (2006), youth delinquency has become someone elses problem. By analysing the role of social work within the youth justice system, the article shows that (i) social work has not only been the victim of recent changes, but that it has also withdrawn from the debate on youth justice, and (ii) that this process is related to how social work is defined as a methodical answer to the problem of youth delinquency.
Article
Social Work and the Shift from Welfare to Justice
Lieve Bradt 1 * and Maria Bouverne-De Bie 2
2 Professor at the Department of Social Welfare Studies at Ghent University
Lieve Bradt, E-mail: Lieve.Bradt{at}UGent.be
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