scholarly journals The Influence of the Intimacy with Social Workers on the Use of Social Welfare Services of Married Immigrant Women - Focusing on Mediating Effects of Quantity of the Welfare Service-related Information

2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 290-301
Author(s):  
O-Bok Lee
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
KRISTEN PUE

Abstract When governments acquire third-party social welfare services (SWS), they create institutions of acquisition. The rules and practices that governments adopt define who is able to participate, on what basis, and how prices are determined. This paper conceptualizes the institutions of SWS acquisition, their variations, and implications, in order to contribute to a deeper understanding of the link between contracting and nonprofit commercialisation. Institutions of SWS acquisition include rules of entry, participation, and assessment. Resulting acquisition regimes can be marketised to a greater or lesser extent, and this is influential through its effect on nonprofit competition. Drawing on interviews with public servants and nonprofit staff, the paper compares acquisition regimes for homelessness services in England, a regime that closely resembles a market, and Canada, a regime which is not marketised. In contrast to their non-marketised counterparts, this paper finds that marketised SWS acquisition regimes create incentives for participants to reduce prices by loss-leading or ratcheting down service quality.


2019 ◽  
pp. 64-118
Author(s):  
Yoosun Park

In the so-called controlled phase of the removal of the Nikkei, social workers on loan to the Bureau of Public Assistance were responsible for the provision of “all necessary social welfare services for the individuals affected by the Exclusion Order” and on hand at all of the 123 Control Stations. Social workers interviewed, registered, and counseled all Nikkei; made recommendations for exemptions and deferments; organized family separations as well as unions and reunions; and tagged and eventually shipped all of them off to temporary detention camps, usually referred to as Assembly Centers. The case number assigned to each family by a social worker during this registration process was the one with which all individuals and accompanying luggage were tagged for removal and used to identify them throughout their incarceration.


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