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Practitioners in social care are often required to work with clients who do not want to work with them, and these 'reluctant' clients can often be the most challenging, but most rewarding, to work with. This practical, jargon-free book covers all the issues that practitioners are likely to encounter in the course of working with reluctant clients.
Involuntary treatment. --- Social service. --- Medical care. --- Social case work.
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Civil society --- Individualism --- Involuntary treatment --- Libertarianism --- Social ethics
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Drug abuse --- Involuntary treatment --- Drug abuse and crime --- Treatment
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Psychiatric hospitals --- Psychiatric ethics --- Mentally ill --- Involuntary treatment --- Abuse of rights
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Criminal psychology --- Involuntary treatment --- Prisoners --- Congresses. --- Congresses. --- Mental health services --- Congresses.
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Involuntary treatment --- Mental health laws --- Mentally ill --- Law and legislation --- Commitment and detention
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Involuntary treatment --- Involuntary treatment --- Mentally ill --- Mentally ill --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- Law and legislation --- Law and legislation --- Commitment and detention --- Commitment and detention --- Droit --- Droit
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Psychiatry --- Involuntary treatment --- Mentally ill --- Psychiatrie --- Traitement non volontaire (Thérapeutique) --- Internement (Psychiatrie) --- History --- Commitment and detention --- Histoire
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Juvenile delinquency --- Délinquance juvénile --- Juvenile justice, Administration of --- Justice pour mineurs --- Child welfare --- Protection de la jeunesse --- Administration --- Social service --- Involuntary treatment
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Most closely associated with the Nazis and World War II atrocities, eugenics is sometimes described as a government-orchestrated breeding program, other times as a pseudo-science, and often as the first step leading to genocide. Less frequently it is recognized as a movement having links to the United States. But eugenics does have a history in this country, and Mark A. Largent tells that story by exploring one of its most disturbing aspects, the compulsory sterilization of more than 64,000 Americans. The book begins in the mid-nineteenth century, when American medical doctors began advocating the sterilization of citizens they deemed degenerate. By the turn of the twentieth century, physicians, biologists, and social scientists championed the cause, and lawmakers in two-thirds of the United States enacted laws that required the sterilization of various criminals, mental health patients, epileptics, and syphilitics. The movement lasted well into the latter half of the century, and Largent shows how even today the sentiments that motivated coerced sterilization persist as certain public figures advocate compulsory birth control-such as progesterone shots for male criminals or female welfare recipients-based on the same assumptions and motivations that had brought about thousands of coerced sterilizations decades ago.
Eugenics --- Involuntary sterilization --- Castration of criminals and defectives --- Compulsory sterilization --- Eugenic sterilization --- Sterilization, Eugenic --- Sterilization of criminals and defectives --- Involuntary treatment --- Sterilization (Birth control) --- Reproductive rights --- History.
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