Full Description
In At Risk, Karen J. Swift and Marilyn Callahan examine risk and risk assessment in the context of professional practice in child protection, social work, and other human services. They argue that the tools, technologies, and practices used to measure risk to the individual have gone unquestioned and unstudied and that current methods of risk assessment may be distorting the principles of social justice.
Central to this study is an examination of the everyday experiences of workers and parents engaged in risk assessment processes in Canadian child welfare investigations. Going beyond theory, Swift and Callahan highlight how risk evaluations play out in actual interactions with vulnerable people. Pointing out that standardized risk assessment tools do not take factors such as class, race, gender, and culture into account, At Risk raises important questions about the viability of risk management plans that are not tailored to individual situations.
Contents
Introduction
Part I
Chapter 1: The Social Relations of Risk
Chapter 2: From Social to Individual Risk
Chapter 3: Risk and Social Welfare
Chapter 4: The Entrenchment of Risk Assessment in Social Services
Part II
Chapter 5: The Institutional World
Chapter 6: In the Name of Risk
Chapter 7: Risk Reduction
Part III
Chapter 8: "What Have They Thought of Now?"
Bibliography
Index