2016
DOI: 10.1080/21931674.2016.1222788
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Transnational histories of social work and social welfare – An introduction

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Along with historical accounts being in short supply in previous research, the absence of transnational perspectives is conspicuous and thus a serious omission. Internationally, child welfare and social work researchers increasingly discuss transnationalism (An, Chambon, & Köngeter, ; Schwarzer, Kämmerer‐Rütten, Schleyer‐Lindenmann, & Wang, ), including in dedicated academic journals (e.g., Transnational Social Review ). Nevertheless, “the existing literature on social work transnationalism is still young and tentative” (Boccagni, Righard, & Bolzman, , p. 313).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Along with historical accounts being in short supply in previous research, the absence of transnational perspectives is conspicuous and thus a serious omission. Internationally, child welfare and social work researchers increasingly discuss transnationalism (An, Chambon, & Köngeter, ; Schwarzer, Kämmerer‐Rütten, Schleyer‐Lindenmann, & Wang, ), including in dedicated academic journals (e.g., Transnational Social Review ). Nevertheless, “the existing literature on social work transnationalism is still young and tentative” (Boccagni, Righard, & Bolzman, , p. 313).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Instead, they argue that the ethical complexities of social work require a focus on 'practical wisdom and contextual appreciation' (p. 1641). Yet, in the context of international social work standards and education, the development of inter-cultural dialogue addressing such uncertainties has barely begun (An et al, 2016;Dominelli and Ioakimidis, 2017;Gray, 2005Gray, , 2010Healy, 2007), even while Anglophone approaches are being emulated by other countries around the world (Melton, 2009).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Transnational history of Social Work between Germany and Palestine | Social movements supported the dissemination of ideas and concepts to solve social problems globally (An et al 2016). In the case of Jewish-German social work, this process is deeply intertwined with forced migratory movements of Jewish social work experts.…”
Section: Jewish Social Work Biographies Between Germany and Mandatory...mentioning
confidence: 99%