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Introduction to Part Two On social care, communities and the conditions for well-being
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Published:October 2017
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Social policies concerned with the areas of social care and of social work as a profession have always been topics on which Pinker has made significant contributions. His writings more frequently and in more detail dealt with what are often referred to as the ‘personal social services’ than those of, say, T.H. Marshall, Richard Titmuss or David Donnison. In this book, we are covering, among other matters, Pinker’s contributions to the interpretation of social policies affecting social work. However, his extensive contributions on what may be called the politics of social work as a profession or its governance will not be central to this study.
The Conservative Party won the general election in 1979 under Margaret Thatcher. At that time, some communitarians, notably Roger Hadley and Stephen Hatch in Social Welfare and the Failure of the State (1981), wanted to enhance personal social services budgets in order to increase support for informal networks. Other social researchers simply called for more prominence to be given to the study of informal care, and to what extent ‘networks’ of care could be said to exist. Within this general context, the Conservative government set up a working party in 1980 to review the role and tasks of social workers.
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