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Routledge Handbook of Service User Involvement in Human Services Research and Education [Minkštas viršelis]

Edited by (Queen's University Belfast, UK), Edited by , Edited by , Edited by (MBChB Foundation Year 1 doctor, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, UK), Edited by
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 568 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x174 mm, weight: 984 g, 14 Tables, black and white; 11 Line drawings, black and white; 5 Halftones, black and white; 16 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Apr-2022
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367523566
  • ISBN-13: 9780367523565
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 568 pages, aukštis x plotis: 246x174 mm, weight: 984 g, 14 Tables, black and white; 11 Line drawings, black and white; 5 Halftones, black and white; 16 Illustrations, black and white
  • Serija: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Išleidimo metai: 29-Apr-2022
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367523566
  • ISBN-13: 9780367523565
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Worldwide, there has been a growth in service user involvement in education and research in recent years. This handbook is the first book which identifies what is happening in different regions of the world to provide different countries and client groups with the opportunity to learn from each other.

The book is divided into five sections: Section One examines service user involvement in context exploring theoretical issues which underpin service user involvement. In Section Two we focus on the state of service user involvement in human services education and research across the globe including examples of innovative practice, but also identifying examples of where it is not happening and why. Section Three offers more detailed examination of such involvement in a wide range of professional education learning settings. Section Four focuses on the involvement of service users in research involving a wide range of service user groups and situations. Lastly, Section Five explores future challenges for education and research to ensure involvement remains meaningful.

The book includes forty-eight chapters, including seventeen case-studies, from all regions of the world, this is the first book to both highlight the subjects methodological and theoretical issues and give practical examples in education and research for those wishing to engage in this field.

It will be of interest to all service users, scholars and students of social work, nursing, occupational therapy, and other human service subjects.

Recenzijos

"The first book on service user involvement in education and research that highlights its methodological and theoretical issues. Its impressive in its scope with the presentation of case-studies from all over the globe. With its reflections on what works in practice, it is a significant contribution to the contemporary debate of co-working with service users in human services education and research."

Dr Kristel Driessens, Head Centre of Expertise Strengths Based Social Work, Karel de Grote Hogeschool, Antwerp, Belguim

"This book that locates service user involvement in a historical and political context. The theoretical discussions in the book are followed by case presentations from different nations where efforts to implement user involvement in education and/ or research are discussed. To say that service user involvement is a very important thing, and that it is necessary, is not the same as saying that it makes a difference-this book begins to provide the evidence of the impact it can make."

Ole Petter Askheim, Professor, Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences

"As a user, lecturer, author and social debater, it feels obvious that social colleges work actively with experiential knowledge in education, but as a user-representative, I know that it is unfortunately far from obvious. The challenge is to take notice of the very useful experience for people to learn from me as a human being, a not scientific experiment. The knowledge of how to make the most of user competence in a proven and dignified way is available and this book provides an excellent basis for taking the form of such an ambition."

Malin Widerlöv, User Lecturer

"Service User involvement has been central to the process of updating the Global Standards for Social Work Education and Training. The IFSW/IASSW global consultation has revealed that, despite some progress in Service User involvement in research and education, there is a dearth of relevant literature. This seminal collection of essays helps bridge such gap. The editors of this handbook have managed to collect, document and analyse unique examples of Service User involvement in education and research. Crucially, the book also provides a powerful contextualisation of the barriers service users have faced in academic and research contexts. The authors make a passionate case for the necessity of genuine and meaningful co-production of knowledge. This is an essential handbook for all academics, students, service users and activists interested in co-production and the creation of inclusive and empowering academic environments."

Vasilios Ioakimidis, Professor of Social Work- Head of Allied Health, Oral Health and Social Work, University of Essex. IFSW Global Commissioner- Interim Education Commission

List of figures
xiii
List of tables
xiv
About the contributors xv
Acknowledgements xxvi
Foreword xxvii
Introduction to the book 1(6)
Peter Beresford
Hugh McLaughlin
Section 1 Service user involvement in context: theoretical issues
7(104)
1 Critical issues in the development of service user involvement
9(8)
Joe Duffy
Peter Beresford
2 Improving understanding of service user involvement and identity: a guide for service providers and practitioners organizing involvement activities with disabled people
17(13)
Becki Meakin
Joanna Matthews
3 Who are the service users? Language, neo-liberalism and social constructions
30(11)
Hugh McLaughlin
4 Experiential knowledge in mental health services, research and professional education
41(13)
Steve Gillard
Rhiannon Foster
Angela Sweeney
5 Ethical involvement of service users
54(10)
Beverley Burke
Andrea Newman
6 A matter of power: relationships between professionals and disabled service users
64(21)
Colin Cameron
Joanne Molloy-Graham
Maggie Cameron
7 The housing campaign -- User Involvement in action
85(9)
Brendan McKeever
8 Talking heads: why asylum seeker parents are scared of social workers -- mending the gaps between us
94(7)
Nada Abdulla
Bini Araia
Helen Casey
Ibrahim Dialllo
Anna Makoni
Yvonne Mondiwa
Elaine Spencer
Luwam Tekeste
9 Talking heads: training for the non-disabled
101(10)
Colin Cameron
Maggie Cameron
Colin Hambrook
Section 2 The state of service user involvement in human services involvement in education and research across the globe
111(116)
10 A tsunami of lived experience: from regional Australia to global mental health activism
113(11)
Joanne Newman
Rebecca Jury
Kathy Boxall
11 The meeting place between service users and students: mediums of learning at the School of Social Work of the University of Sherbrooke
124(12)
Annie Lambert
Paul Morin
Sophie Nobert-Bordeleau
Emilie Pothier-Tessier
Marie-Josce St-Jean
Annie Patenaude
12 Talking heads: the non-existence of meaningful service user consultation in Congo Brazzaville
136(6)
Charden Pouo
13 Service user involvement and gap-mending practices in Sweden
142(9)
Cecilia Heule
Marcus Knutagard
Arne Kristiansen
14 Challenging racism in Hong Kong: an e-learning approach to social work education
151(11)
Raes Begum Baig
Kar-Choi Chan
Jim Campbell
15 Lessons learned: the meaning making power of involvement
162(12)
Joanne Sansome
16 Blank page: involvement of expert by experience in social work education in Slovenia
174(12)
Petra Videmiek
17 Emergence and clashes in disabled service user organizations in South Korea
186(9)
SeKwang Hwang
18 Service users and participation -- the Spanish experience
195(11)
Emilio Jose Gomez-Ciriano
19 Social work in the UK: a case for radical co-production replacing worn out structures
206(12)
Helen Casey
Dan Vale
Maryatn Zonouzi
20 Faculty perceptions of service user involvement in human services education
218(6)
Nafees Alam
21 Talking heads: Nigeria to the UK
224(3)
Larry Amadi-Emina
Section 3 Service user involvement in human services education
227(156)
22 Disabled activists' involvement in developing and delivering disability studies at St Angela's College, Sligo, Ireland
229(10)
Peter Kearns
Susan Carton
23 Service user involvement in professional skill development: planning and delivering a skills practice workshop
239(11)
Jim Bell
Martin Fraser
Sara Hitchin
Linda McCulloch
Lynda Morrison
24 Service users reaching out to help professionals: shaping professional education on substance use and poverty issues
250(10)
Hilda Loughran
Gary Broderick
Ray Hegarty
25 Service user involvement in nurse education
260(14)
Laura Serrant
Gillian Janes
Opeyemi Odejimi
26 The potential for interprofessional education
274(11)
Elizabeth Anderson
Jenny Ford
Emma Smith
27 All our justice: people with convictions and `participatory' criminal justice
285(11)
Gillian Buck
Paula Harriott
Kemi Ryan
Natasha Ryan
Philippa Tomczak
28 Continuous teacher training for providing specialised educational services in Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
296(14)
Leila Regina d'Olivcira de Paula Nunes
Carolina Rizzotto Schirmer
29 Doing more than telling stories
310(12)
Wendy Bryant
30 Investing in Children: how a children's human rights organization contributes to human services research and educ ation
322(7)
Jordan Dodds
Dr Felicity Shenton
31 Don't judge a book by its cover: lived experiences of the involvement of older people in social work education
329(10)
Sarah Lonbay
Shirley Hallam
Patricia Higgins
Sheila Weatheritt
32 Service user involvement in countries of conflict
339(8)
Joe Duffy
33 New Zealand's indigenous end-of-life care customs: a qualitative study on Maori, by Maori, for Maori, with Maori
347(12)
Tess Moeke-Maxwell
Kathleen Mason
Merryn Gott
34 `Moving away from the sound of one hand clapping?'
359(12)
John Stephens
Katherinc Baker
All Finlayson
35 Social pedagogy, collaborative learning and outcomes in service user and carer involvement in social work education
371(12)
Susan Levy
Claire Ferrier
Elinor Dowson
Jordan Risbridger
Section 4 Service user involvement in research in the human services
383(122)
36 Lessons of inclusive learning: the value of experiential knowledge of persons with a learning disability in social work education
385(18)
Jean Pierre Wilken
Jeroen Knevel
Sascha van Gijzel
37 How can we survive and thrive as survivor researchers?
403(16)
Jacqui Lovell-Norton
Konstantina (Dina) Poursanidou
Karen Machin
Stephen Jeffreys
Holly Dale
38 The trouble with coproduction
419(8)
Nick Watson
39 Augmented communication: patient and public involvement in research: rhetoric and reality
427(13)
Liz Moulam
Stuart Meredith
Helen Whittle
Yvonne Lynch
Janice Murray
40 From tokenism to full participation: autistic involvement in research and the delivery of services
440(6)
Damian Milton
41 The possibilities and constraints of service user research collaborations: the Peer Qualitative Research Group
446(8)
Jijian Voronka
Jill Grant
Deb Wise Harris
Arianna Kennedy
Jumna Komaroff
42 Rhetoric to reality: challenges and opportunities for embedding young people's involvement in health research
454(13)
Louca-Mai Brady
43 "Recently, I have felt like a service user again": conflicts in collaborative research, a case from Norway
467(10)
Sidsel Natland
44 What difference does it make? The service user contribution to evaluation
477(10)
Claire Russell
Roger Smith
45 Talking heads: reflections of a researcher with multiple impairments: Raising the voices of young disabled people preparing for life beyond segregated school
487(8)
Paul Doyle
46 Talking heads: reflections on learning from gap mending participants: Experiences matter
495(10)
Helen Casey
Cecilia Heule
Arne Kristiansen
Section 5 Future challenges and opportunities
505(16)
47 Professional education: does service user involvement make a difference?
507(8)
Colin Cameron
Helen Casey
Joe Duffy
48 Service user involvement in research: what difference does it make?
515(6)
Peter Beresford
Hugh McLaughlin
Index 521
Hugh McLaughlin is Professor of Social Work at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK.

Peter Beresford is Professor of Citizen Participation at the University of Essex, UK and Emeritus Professor of Social Policy at Brunel University London, UK.

Colin Cameron is a Senior Lecturer at Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.

Helen Casey is a staff tutor with the Open University and has worked in social work education for fifteen years.

Joe Duffy is a Senior Lecturer in Social Work at Queens University, Belfast, Northern Ireland.