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Social Statues In Social Work

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This is a perfect intro social work book, there are lots of cases or history events that guide to the practices. Social work and social welfare involves with diverse population. This paper will focus on the manner in which life experiences influences people's values and beliefs ethnicity, economic statues, age, social statues, environment, and sexism, it also aimed to understand the role and function of social workers. People have many differences believe in rich and poor. Many people believe the stereotype nonwhite unemployed single mother with lots of children, they lived in a very bad area, they are poor. Age is also as a factor. According to recent statistic, one-third of the Americans will live in property between 20 to 40, as being African American they got a higher risk for property, such as education limitation. The federal court involved to this large controversial discussion and make laws to solve the problem for social statues in court and politics. For example, while Franklin Roosevelt reigned, he created numerous great issues, the most famous one was the New Deal for solving the Great Depressing. The Federal Emergency Relief Act (FERA) provided temporary financial support to unemployed persons. The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was an early federally funded employment program that became the forerunner to the Job Corps program …show more content…

It provides vouchers to poor women who are eligible based on their income and current health, and purchase foods for themselves and their children. A part of U.S. history and still pervasive today, the definition of sexism as men are superior to women as a result of gender. There is a case, there is a man and a woman went to the same factory to work and spent same amount of time. However, they got the different amount of salaries; the man got reasonable money, woman’s

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