casework

views updated May 18 2018

casework The earliest and possibly most widely discussed method of social work, pioneered originally by Octavia Hill in the London Charity Organization Society (1869), but given its first systematic statement by Mary Richmond in her book Social Diagnosis (1917)
. Whilst an emphasis is placed upon meeting the needs and solving the problems of the individual person, and there is a broad affinity to psychoanalysis, casework harbours a range of different theoretical traditions. It is one of the major methods of social work—the others being group work and community work. The former involves the social worker in the activities and situation of a small group of clients facing common or similar difficulties; the latter places the social worker in a neighbourhood area, to act as a resource for, and mobilizer of, local activists.

casework

views updated Jun 27 2018

case·work1 / ˈkāsˌwərk/ • n. social work directly concerned with individuals, esp. that involving a study of a person's family history and personal circumstances.DERIVATIVES: case·work·er n.case·work2 • n. the decorative outer case protecting the workings of a complex mechanism such as an organ or harpsichord.