SWB110
Social Work - Working with Families
Social Work - Working with Families
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 72 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Affaires sociales |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 06.11.2017 / 08.11.2017 |
Lien de web |
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Family forms
Concerns the variety of patterned or structured ways in which people live and relate together as family members, sometimes raising technical issues of how to describe individuals' relationships to each other
Families of choice
The concept of 'families of choice' is intended to capture the commitment of chosen, rather than fixed, relationships and ties of intimacy, care and support
Household
A household is a physical structure that can contain an individual or a social group that may or may not be considered a family, who co-reside, usually involving sleeping under the same roof and typically sharing a range of domestic activities -- everyday
Kinship
Refers to formal systems of relationships with regard to alliances of marriage and lines of descent, More recently it is also used to refer to broad family connections in contemporary developed societies
Family effects
how family membership and experiences may have consequences for individuals
Family lifecycle and lifecourse:
Suggests that the ways in which families change over time are characterised by a cyclical pattern, while the concept of the life course pays particular attention to the individual life trajectory as a person moves through different roles and experiences
Role theory
attempts to explain the way people in particular social positions are expected to behave, or the way in which they develop particular patterns of behaviour when they occupy such positions
Family systems
draws on the idea of system as used in engineering, to describe the family as a whole entity in which all the parts are seen as closely interconnected
Attachment
Suggests that babies and young children need to create satisfactory emotional bonds with their caretakers if they are to develop as healthy children and adults, and make adequate relationships through life
Social divisions
Refers to the regular patterns of division in society that are associated with membership of particular social groupings, generally in terms of advantages and disadvantages, inequalities and differences.
Family policies
Refer to government statements, goals and courses of action concerning the provision of welfare and distribution of goods that affect family lives, resources and forms but can be implicated in a wide range of policy areas
Problem families
Term used for those families said to be on the margins of mainstream society in terms of their behaviour and values
Functionalism
Sees the family as an institution constituting as a basic building block of society, performing certain functions that must be fulfilled for social order to be possible and for society to continue
Conflict theories
Share a concern with power inequalities that occur within and between families. Tend to bring into view the family as an oppressive institution
Intimacy
Refers to the meaning and expression of close family and personal relationships, and the qualities that they may be supposed to provide
Coupledom
Dyadic Relationships may be classed as marriage/partnership/coupledom - expected to have durability.
Negotiation
Concerns interactions between family members about how to understand a situation, and the courses of action that emerge from these understandings
Feminisms
Focuses on making all women visible, drawing attention to gender politics and see family, and mothering in particular, as a key of power.
Child Development
A central concept within psychology for understanding change during the early years of life. It is rooted in a biological view that sees these years in terms of maturational stages from baby-hood through adulthood.
Power
Refers to an individuals ability to influence others to do what the individual wants
Societal Functions of Families
Replacement of the population, Care of the young, Socialisation of new members, Regulation of sexual behaviour, Source of affection
Role
A culturally determined pattern of behaviour that is prescribed for an individual who occupies a specific status or rank in relation to others
Conflict
An atagonistic state or actions involving divergent ideas or interests
Cognitive Restructuring
Directed at resturcturing distorted beliefs in order to change dysfunctional thoughts/behaviours/interactions
Cultural Universals
Elements, patterns, traits, or institutions that are common to all human cultures worldwide.
Cultural Universals
Elements, patterns, traits or institutions that are common to all human cultures worldwide
Socialisation
A set of interpersonal processes through which cultrual meaing is passed on and changed
Constructivism
the focus of meaning making is within the individual; their interpretations
Constructionism
the focus is on meaning making and developing shared understandings through processes of social interaction
Identity
feelings, thoughts, motives etc. that both influence and reflect your understanding and expressions of your place in the world
Symbolic interactionism
helps us understand how stereotypes, stigma, discrimination and ethnocentrism are created through processes of social interaction
Brofenbrenner Theory
- Chronosystem (time)
- Macrosystem (cultural)
- Exosystem (structural)
- Mesosystem (social)
- Microsystem (relational)
Multidimensional Aproach
Inner World
- Biological
- Spiritual
- Psycological
Outer World
- Relational
- Structural
- Social
- Cultural
- Time
Circular causality
Our behaviour both influences and is influenced by others
Homeostasis
a system will seek to restore the known balance
Power principles
- Power is a perception - if others do not perceive someone's power than their behaviour is not dominant
- Power as a relational concept - one individual cannot be dominant without someone else being submissive
- Power as resource based - usually represents a struggle over resources
- Principle of least interest and dependence power - person with less to lose can have greater power
- Power as enabling or disabling - power can be used to achieve success or excessive power can cripple relationships
- Power as a perogitive - person with more power can make/break the rules
Key transitions in the family life cycle
- Couplehood
- First Child
- Additional Children
- School age
- Adolescence
- Launching (children leaving home)
- Re-coupling (children becoming partnered)
- Aging parents
Community is between members of...?
- Kinship
- Interests
- Locality Groups
Social Network Theory
Four Concepts
- Weak ties - friend of a friend
- Strong ties - relationships of trust, mutality and reciprocity
- Vertical ties - link a community's people and organisations to large insitutions and societal structures (connect us outside of our community)
- Horizontal ties - the links between people and organisations within the community
Examples of critical theories are...?
- Marxism - focusing on class inequality
- Feminism - focusing on gender inequality
- Critical race theory - focusing on race inequality
- Critical social theory - critiques power at all levels (challenges the assumptions upon which theories of 'order' are based