Environmental Sciences, asked by aishwaryatalekar2004, 3 days ago

study the loel community traditions in your locality and heighlight point which favour environment preference.​

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Answered by patildhanraj594
0

Answer:

Many commentators have proposed that social work practice in western nations has become increasingly individual and family oriented, rather abandoning social work roots in settlements and community work in favour of individual assessments and packages of interventions (Butler and Drakeford, 2001, Hugman, 2009, Jack and Owen, 2009). Although assessment practices in the UK (e.g. DCSF, 2006) demand that we pay attention to community and environmental factors on a child or adult service user's everyday life, there is little expectation that social work in its current form may act at a community level. Nonetheless, alongside this individualistic approach in statutory social work, social policy in the US and the UK concerning children's wellbeing has to some extent taken a neighbourhood 'turn'. Across the UK, from Sure Start to local authority based children and youth partnerships, local policy makers are encouraged to take an area based analysis of children's welfare needs and plan accordingly. In the US, third sector and government initiatives are working in many communities to bolster social capital in low-income neighbourhoods in an attempt to improve child outcomes (Delva, Momper, & Allen-Meares, 2010

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Answered by hajaraasharaf333
0

Answer:

Many commentators have proposed that social work practice in western nations has become increasingly individual and family oriented, rather abandoning social work roots in settlements and community work in favour of individual assessments and packages of interventions (Butler and Drakeford, 2001, Hugman, 2009, Jack and Owen, 2009). Although assessment practices in the UK (e.g. DCSF, 2006) demand that we pay attention to community and environmental factors on a child or adult service user's everyday life, there is little expectation that social work in its current form may act at a community level. Nonetheless, alongside this individualistic approach in statutory social work, social policy in the US and the UK concerning children's wellbeing has to some extent taken a neighbourhood 'turn'. Across the UK, from Sure Start to local authority based children and youth partnerships, local policy makers are encouraged to take an area based analysis of children's welfare needs and plan accordingly. In the US, third sector and government initiatives are working in many communities to bolster social capital in low-income neighbourhoods in an attempt to improve child outcomes (Delva, Momper, & Allen-Meares, 2010

Explanation:

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