Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
-
- Business (3)
- Nonprofit Administration and Management (3)
- Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration (2)
- Social Welfare (2)
- Adult and Continuing Education (1)
-
- Communication (1)
- Economics (1)
- Education (1)
- Leadership Studies (1)
- Organizational Communication (1)
- Other Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration (1)
- Public Administration (1)
- Social Influence and Political Communication (1)
- Social and Philosophical Foundations of Education (1)
- Urban Studies (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Social Work
Deliberation, Dialogue And Deliberative Democracy In Social Work Education And Practice, Roger A. Lohmann
Deliberation, Dialogue And Deliberative Democracy In Social Work Education And Practice, Roger A. Lohmann
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
Ideas of public talk were central in various aspects of the history of social work and professional education. Social work has never just been a consumer of deliberative ideas. Several fundamental ideas associated with deliberative democracy theory arose directly out of social work education and practice and continue to function in different forms within contemporary social work theory and practice.
Giving Circles, Roger A. Lohmann
Giving Circles, Roger A. Lohmann
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
A giving circle is a group of members pool their funds and information in collective or joint donations to organizations, causes or individuals. The article reviews some of the research on giving circles in the first decade of the 21st century.
Spontaneous Order, Symbolic Interaction And The Somewhat-Less-Hidden Hand, Roger A. Lohmann
Spontaneous Order, Symbolic Interaction And The Somewhat-Less-Hidden Hand, Roger A. Lohmann
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Commons, Roger A. Lohmann
Commons, Roger A. Lohmann
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
The commons is a theoretical formalism that is useful in understanding many diverse problems of civil society. A common (or commons) is an economic, political, social, and legal institution that enables joint, shared, mutual or collective natural or social action by agents using a “pool” of shared or jointly held or mutually controlled resources. A substantial body of work exists detailing natural common resource pools acted upon by physical or biological agents. Another large body of work on humanly-directed natural resource pools study the human-natural environment interface, interspecies conflict and population density. Studies of social commons have also looked at …