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Eileen Munro 《Child & Family Social Work》2019,24(1):123-130
The argument is made for having a positive error culture in child protection to improve decision‐making and risk management. This requires organizations to accept that mistakes are likely and to treat them as opportunities for learning and improving. In contrast, in many organizations, a punitive reaction to errors leads to workers hiding them and developing a defensive approach to their practice with children and families. The safety management literature has shown how human error is generally not simply due to a “bad apple” but made more or less likely by the work context that helps or hinders good performance. Improving safety requires learning about the weaknesses in the organization that contribute to poor performance. To create a learning culture, people need to feel that when they talk about mistakes or weak practice, there will be a constructive response from their organization. One aspect of reducing the blame culture is to develop a shared understanding of how practice will be judged and how those appraising practice will avoid the hindsight bias. To facilitate a positive error culture, a set of risk principles are presented that offer a set of criteria by which practice should be appraised. 相似文献
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Anne M. Armstrong Louise Munro 《Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy》2018,39(2):174-185
The following paper centres on my unique experience as a white Australian therapist who is able to sympathise with a Western world view while being immersed in an Islamic world view. The goal is to share my journey as a Muslim Australian via an auto‐ethnography reflexive method. Using diaries, intentional reflexive positioning, and multiple modes of supervision, I contemplate an Islamic identity and value system while negotiating poststructural therapies such as solution‐focused collaborative, and in particular, narrative therapy as viable approaches to working with the Muslim community. There are two inquiries which are of interest. The first is to reflexively describe the experience of being a Muslim practitioner and wondering whether core differences in epistemological views between social constructionism and Islamic doctrine can be overcome. Secondly, this enquiry explores Quranic guidelines about how to perceive ‘problems’ in life, based on the premise that understanding how an Islamic world view addresses life's troubles may add to deeper conceptions of the role of difficulties. I propose that adherent Muslims have a natural metaphorical way of thinking that connects with some of the poststructural therapeutic skills and techniques and at the same time draw on past Quranic solutions for contemporary problems. Little has been written on narrative therapy as a suitable approach to working with Muslim clients. In the current paper I review my personal experience as a veiled Muslim therapist striving to implement narrative therapy alongside an Islamic epistemology. 相似文献
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Empowering looked-after children 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Munro 《Child & Family Social Work》2001,6(2):129-137
Children's rights include the right to participation in decisions made about them. For looked-after children, this right is enshrined in the Children Act (England & Wales) 1989. This article reports the results of a study of children's views about their experience of being looked after and the degree of power that they felt they had to influence decision making. Their main areas of criticism were frequent changes of social worker, lack of an effective voice at reviews, lack of confidentiality and, linked to this, lack of a confidante. The findings are discussed in relation to recent policy changes. Specifically, the Looked After Children documentation and the Quality Protects initiative, by setting out uniform objectives and performance criteria, seem to restrict the freedom of local authority management and of social workers to respond to individual children's preferences, or to give weight to what the children themselves consider to be in their best interest. 相似文献
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Popular commentaries suggest that the movement against genetic engineering in agriculture (anti-GE movement) was born in Europe,
rooted in European cultural approaches to food, and sparked by recent food-safety scares such as “mad cow” disease. Yet few
realize that the anti-GE movement's origins date back thirty years, that opposition to agricultural biotechnology emerged
with the technology itself, and that the movement originated in the United States rather than Europe. We argue here that neither
the explosion of the GE food issue in the late 1990s nor the concomitant expansion of the movement can be understood without
recognizing the importance of the intellectual work carried out by a “critical community” of activists during the two-decade-long
period prior to the 1990s. We show how these early critics forged an oppositional ideology and concrete set of grievances
upon which a movement could later be built. Our analysis advances social movement theory by establishing the importance of
the intellectual work that activists engage in during the “proto-mobilizational” phase of collective action, and by identifying
the cognitive and social processes by which activists develop a critical, analytical framework. Our elaboration of four specific
dimensions of idea/ideology formation pushes the literature toward a more complete understanding of the role of ideas and
idea-makers in social movements, and suggests a process of grievance construction that is more “organic” than strategic (pace the framing literature).
Rachel Schurman is Associate Professor of Sociology and Global Studies at the University of Minnesota. Her research interests lie in the
areas of international political economy of food and agriculture, environmental sociology, and social movements. She is co-editor
of Engineering Trouble: Biotechnology and Its Discontents (University of California Press, 2003) and several articles and book chapters on the anti-genetic engineering movement. Her
current book project, with William Munro, explores how organized social resistance to GMOs has shaped the trajectory of agricultural
biotechnology.
William Munro is Associate Professor of Political Science and Director, International Studies Program, at Illinois Wesleyan University.
His research and writing focuses on the politics of agrarian change and state formation in Africa, as well as post-conflict
development. He is the author of The Moral Economy of the State: Conservation, Community Development and State-Making in Zimbabwe (Ohio University Press,1998). He is currently collaborating with Rachel Schurman on a book about social resistance to agricultural
biotechnology. 相似文献
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Lyle Munro 《Social movement studies》2013,12(1):75-94
Following Tilly, this paper argues that a social movement is what it does as much as why it does it. This approach is particularly important in the case of the animal rights movement, which is often demonized as extremist and violent. Critics of the movement claim that animal activists use letter bombs, arson attacks and threats to intimidate those they see as animal abusers and that violent direct action of this kind is typical of the movement as a whole. The present paper argues that the mainstream animal movement – in the USA, the UK and Australia – is overwhelmingly non-violent and that its core strategies and tactics have two broad aims, namely to gain publicity for the movement and to challenge conventional thinking about how we treat non-human animals. This is achieved primarily by the deployment of the key tactical mechanisms of persuasion, protest, non-cooperation and intervention. These tactics may be deployed collectively or as DIY (Do-It-Yourself) activism which many grassroots animal activists – ‘caring sleuths’ to use Shapiro's apt term – seem to prefer. The paper focuses on demonstrations and pamphleteering as examples of publicity strategies or liberal governance strategies as well as critical governance strategies or interference strategies such as the hunger strike, ethical vegetarianism and undercover surveillance. 相似文献