Works Cited

Ethics for Social Work

Course #77233 - $36 -

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  • Participation Instructions
    • Review the course material online or in print.
    • Complete the course evaluation.
    • Review your Transcript to view and print your Certificate of Completion. Your date of completion will be the date (Pacific Time) the course was electronically submitted for credit, with no exceptions. Partial credit is not available.

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15. Rothman JC. From the Front Lines: Student Cases in Social Work Ethics. 4th ed. Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon; 2013.

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22. Libman KA. When "best interests of client" harms third party. In: Rothman JC (ed). From the Front Lines: Student Cases in Social Work Ethics. 4th ed. Boston, MA: Allyn and Bacon; 2013: 37-44.

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44. Sung K, Dunkle RE. How social workers demonstrate respect for elderly clients. J Gerontol Soc Work. 2009;52(3):250-260.

45. Kendall S, Hugman R. Social work and the ethics of involuntary treatment for anorexia nervosa: a postmodern approach. Ethics and Social Welfare. 2013;7(4):310-325.

46. Reamer FG. Social Work Values and Ethics. 4th ed. New York, NY: Columbia University Press; 2013.

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48. Chakrabarty S, Bass EA. Comparing virtue, consequentialist, and deontological ethics-based corporate social responsibility: mitigating microfinance risk in institutional voids. J Bus Ethics. 2015;126(3):486-511.

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50. West A. Sartrean existentialism and ethical decision-making in business. J Bus Ethics. 2008;81(1):15-25.

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52. Bibus AA. Applying approaches from moral philosophy, especially virtue ethics, when facing ethical dilemmas in social work. Journal of Czech and Slovak Social Work. 2013;13(5):33-50.

53. Chamiec-Case R. The contribution of virtue ethics to a richer understanding of social work competencies. Social Work & Christianity. 2013;40(3):251-270.

54. Bibus AA. Supererogation in social work: deciding whether to go beyond the call of duty. J Soc Work Values Ethics. 2015;12(2):27-40.

55. Osmo R, Landau R. The role of ethical theories in decision making by social workers. Soc Work Educ. 2006;25(8):863-876.

56. McAuliffe D, Chenoweth L. Leave no stone unturned: the inclusive model of ethical decision making. Ethics and Social Welfare. 2008;2(1):38-49.

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59. Bell PE, Liu L. Social justice reasoning of education undergraduates: effect of instruction in moral development theory and dilemma discussion in the asynchronous online classroom. International Journal of Technology in Teaching & Learning. 2015;11(2):60-75.

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61. Campbell T. Voicing unease: care ethics in the professionalization of social care. New Bioeth. 2015;21(1):33-45.

62. Acker GM. The challenges in providing services to clients with mental illness: manage care, burnout and somatic symptoms. Community Ment Health J. 2010;46(6):591-600.

63. Chechak D. Social work as a value-based profession: value conflicts and implications for practitioners' self-concepts. J Soc Work Values Ethics. 2015;12(2):41-48.

64. Varcoe C, Pauly B, Webster G, Storch J. Moral distress: tensions as springboards for action. HEC Forum. 2012;24(1):51-62.

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66. Laws T, Chilton J. Ethics, cultural competence, and the changing face of America. Pastoral Psychol. 2013;62(2):175-188.

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68. Sue DW, Rasheed MN, Matthews Rasheed J. Multicultural Social Work Practice: A Competency-Based Approach to Diversity and Social Justice. 2nd ed. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons; 2016.

69. Carey M, Green L (eds). Practical Social Work Ethics: Complex Dilemmas within Applied Social Care. Surrey: Ashgate Publishing; 2013.

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73. Resnik DB. Research Ethics Timeline (1932–Present). Available at https://www.niehs.nih.gov/research/resources/bioethics/timeline/index.cfm. Last accessed February 18, 2022.

74. Weinberg M. The social construction of social work ethics: politicizing and broadening the lens. Journal of Progressive Human Services. 2010;21(1):32-44.

75. Chase YE. Professional ethics: complex issues for the social work profession. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment. 2015;25(7):766-773.

76. Kopels S. Changes to the NASW Code of Ethics and school social work. School Social Work Journal. 2018;42(2):IX-XII.

77. Bent-Goodley TB. Living our core values. Soc Work. 2017;62(4):293-295.

78. Pugh GL. A model of comparative ethics education for social workers. J Soc Work Educ. 2017;53(2):312-326.

79. Pasini A. How to make good choices? Ethical perspectives guiding social workers moral reasoning. Soc Work Educ. 2016;35(4):377-386.

80. Alsrayheen EA, Aldiabat K. Nicotine vaccines for smoking prevention and treatment from utilitarian and deontological ethical perspectives. Online Journal of Health Ethics. 2018;14(2).

81. Koggel C, Orme J. Care ethics: new theories and applications. Ethics and Social Welfare. 2010;4(2):109-114.

82. Thompson LJ, Wadley DA. Countering globalisation and managerialism: relationist ethics in social work. International Social Work. 2018;61(5):706-723.

83. Buck PW, Fletcher P, Bradley J. Decision-making in social work field education: a "good enough" framework. Soc Work Educ. 2016;35(4):402-413.

84. Ratnapalan S. To be good enough. Canadian Family Physician. 2009;55:239-240.

85. Levitt DH, Farry TJ, Mazzarella JR. Counselor ethical reasoning: decision-making practice versus theory. Counsel Values. 2015;60(1):84-99.

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89. Plakun EM. Psychotherapy, parity, and ethical utilization management. Journal of Psychiatric Practice. 2017;23(1):49-52.

90. Ballard-Kang J. Who's in and who's out? The ethics of excluding language minorities in social work research. Journal of Social Work Values and Ethics. 2018;15(2):5-14.

91. Barsky A. Ethics Alive! Cultural Competence, Awareness, Sensitivity, Humility, and Responsiveness: What's the Difference? Available at https://www.socialworker.com/feature-articles/ethics-articles/ethics-alive-cultural-competence-awareness-sensitivity-humility-responsiveness. Last accessed February 18, 2022.

92. Barsky AE. Social work practice and technology: ethical issues and policy responses. Journal of Technology in Human Services. 2017;35(1):8-19.

93. Reamer FG. Ethical standards for social workers' use of technology: emerging consensus. Journal of Social Work Values & Ethics. 2018;15(2):71-80.

94. Kien G. Postmodernism trumps all: the world without facts. Qualitative Inquiry. 2021;27(3/4):374-380.

95. Santis EL, Zavattaro SM. Performative ethics in the Trump era: a postmodern examination. Public Integrity. 2019;21(5):503-511.

96. van Zyl I, Sabiescu A. Toward intersubjective ethics in community-based research. Community Development. 2020;51(4):303-322.

97. Farr P. Migrant detention, subalternity, and the long road toward hegemony. Ethics & Social Welfare. 2021;15(1):5-19.

98. Pak C-M, Cheung JC-S, Tsui M-S. Looking for social work values and ethics in the textbooks of social services administration over the past 50 years (1965–2014). Human Service Organizations: Management, Leadership & Governance. 2017;41(2):147–161.

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102. Price B. Ethical challenges in delivering person-centred care. Primary Health Care. 2020;30(2):34-41.

103. Tseng PE, Wang YH. Deontological or utilitarian? An eternal ethical dilemma in outbreak. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021;18(16):8565.

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105. Jibiliza X. The rationality of ethics: teleological theory reconciled in the context of abortion. Pharos Journal of Theology. 2021;102(2).

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107. McBeath G, Webb SA. Virtue ethics and social work: being lucky, realistic, and not doing one's duty. British Journal of Social Work. 2002;32(8):1015-1036.

108. van der Meiden J, Noordegraaf M, van Ewijk H. Relational ethics as enrichment of social justice: applying elements of contextual therapy to social work. Qualitative Social Work. 2020;19(1):125-141.

109. Pawar M, Hugman R, Anscombe AW, Alexandra A. Searching for virtue ethics: a survey of social work ethics curriculum and educators. British Journal of Social Work. 2020;50(6):1816-1833.

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113. McCarthy LP, Imboden R, Shdaimah CS, Forrester P. "Ethics are messy:" supervision as a tool to help social workers manage ethical challenges. Ethics & Social Welfare. 2020;14(1):118–134.

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  • Back to Course Home
  • Participation Instructions
    • Review the course material online or in print.
    • Complete the course evaluation.
    • Review your Transcript to view and print your Certificate of Completion. Your date of completion will be the date (Pacific Time) the course was electronically submitted for credit, with no exceptions. Partial credit is not available.