About this journal
It addresses academics, policy makers, managers, social workers and Social Work students engaged in several topics of Social Work (child protection, young offenders, mental health, physical and learning disabilities, addictions, ageing and the elderly, poverty, and immigration).
Relational Social Work is a practice paradigm in which practitioners identify and resolve problems by facilitating coping networks (a set of relationships between people interested in a common aim) to enhance their resilience and capacity for action at both individual and collective levels. The central idea is that change emerges from reciprocal aid: the practitioner helps the network to develop reflexivity and improve in enhancing welfare, and in turn, the network helps practitioners to better understand how they can help it, even when the issue is to counter structural inequalities.
Journal section
Articles section: this section includes theoretical contributions, empirical studies and research on Relational Social Work, and papers studying the implications of relational principles in case, group and community Social Work, with a focus on the interconnection between these three levels.
Voices from practice: in addition to full-length articles, the journal publishes shorter contributions related to practice of Relational Social Work, Social Work, education service users and carers’ voices and experiences.
Aims and scope
Relational Social Work publishes both articles reporting empirical research and theoretical contributions that:
- promote, debate and analyse social work issues from a relational perspective;
- study social service organisation in the framework of the relational approach;
- reflect on the role of social workers according to service user, group and community needs;
- reflect on social service users and carers’ participation in social work practices, social work research and social work education;
- reflect on the learning practice of social work students;
- reflect on social work ethics and values.
Subjects covered by this journal
Social work with children in care, young offenders, people in need, people with physical or learning disabilities, addictions, ageing and the elderly, poverty, and immigration. Social work education.
Addresses
Academics in social work, policy makers, managers, social workers, social work students.
Peer Review process
Each article will be submitted, anonymously, for examination by at least two reviewers (double blind peer review).
Journal information
ISSN: 2532-3814 Relational social work [Online]
Journal registration number 8/2016 (Court of Trento)
2 issues per year (April – October)