
Rural Americans comprise an estimated 18 per cent of the US population and represent roughly 59 million people. Counter to many popularly held beliefs, rural communities can be less than ideal places to live. While these areas may have great natural beauty, they tend to be older, poorer, face healthcare challenges, and have older housing, among other social problems. On top of that, small communities are also likely to face shortages in professional social workers.Despite this, rural content has not been a required element of the social work curricula, even though education programs in social work often address the needs of the region they serve and many of the over 800 accredited programs in the country are located in or serve a rural area.To support social work students and practitioners in a rural setting, Back Home brings together reader-friendly chapters from experts in the field. It extends the scope of rural social work to consider anti-racism, diversity, equity, and inclusion; rural clinical practice; rural advanced generalist practice; and work with day laborers, the elderly, and children.
This book investigates the critical gap in social work education regarding the specific needs and challenges of rural American communities. The author, Munkedaley, compiles contributions from field experts to address the systemic shortages of professional social workers in rural areas. By examining the intersection of poverty, healthcare access, and demographic shifts, the text provides a framework for practitioners to adapt their generalist skills to the unique constraints of non-urban environments.
What You Will Find
Experts identify this text as a necessary resource for filling the rural-content void in current social work curricula. Practitioners frequently note that the book provides a practical, accessible bridge between academic theory and the realities of rural service delivery.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2025-01-17
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0197644260
ISBN-13:
9780197644263
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