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Ethical Principle: Social workers respect the inherent dignity and worth of the person. Social workers treat each person in a caring and respectful fashion, mindful of individual differences and cultural and ethnic diversity.
- Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to The Broader Society
(d) Social workers should act to prevent and eliminate...
- Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities as Professionals
4. Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities as...
- Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to Colleagues
2. Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to Colleagues....
- Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities in Practice Settings
3.01 Supervision and Consultation (a) Social workers who...
- Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to The Social Work Profession
(e) Social workers engaged in evaluation or research should...
- Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to Clients
This agreement should include consideration of whether...
- Highlighted Revisions to The Code of Ethics
Value: Dignity and Worth of the Person Ethical Principle:...
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About NASW The National Association of Social Workers (NASW)...
- Social Workers' Ethical Responsibilities to The Broader Society
16 maj 2021 · Social workers respect individual differences and cultural diversity, and treat each person with dignity and respect. They promote their clients’ capacity and opportunity to address their own needs and improve their personal situations, while also considering the broader interests of society.
18 lut 2023 · In academic and legal contexts, it is typically used in the couplet “human dignity” to denote a kind of basic worth or status that purportedly belongs to all persons equally, and which grounds fundamental moral or political duties or rights.
Ethical Principle: Social workers respect the inherent dignity and worth of the person. Social workers treat each person in a caring and respectful fashion, mindful of individual differences and cultural and ethnic diversity.
30 paź 2023 · Our research identified five key aspects to maintain and protect dignity: (1) acknowledging personhood; (2) recognising people with disability as decision-makers of their lives; (3) realising the right to access information; (4) maintaining the right to privacy; and (5) eliminating or minimising barriers to accessibility and inclusion.
26 cze 2016 · A key lesson from this issue is that ‘Promoting the Dignity and Worth of the People’ not only requires that social workers possess rigorous analytical and methodological tools but also that the profession fully understands and challenges the political nature of the concept of ‘human dignity’.
21 lut 2022 · Dignity work can be performed by individual and collective agents to promote either their own dignity or the dignity of others (Jacobson and Silva Citation 2010). This article shows how social workers perform dignity work to counter stigmatisation of service-users.