Among the significant trends in human services during the 1980s has been the emergence of emphasis on social networks and social supports in research, prevention, and treatment efforts. Today's human service professionals and planners routinely incorporate information about social networks and social supports into assessments and interventions for a wide range of individual and community problems. Social Support Networks is the most comprehensive, up-to-date bibliography yet published on the theory, research, and practical application of social support networks. Containing approximately 2,700 references, it offers detailed listings for journal articles, books, book chapters, and published reports which appeared from 1983 to 1987.
In recent years, social support networks have become a focus for research and scholarship in anthropology, epidemiology, nursing, psychiatry, psychology, public health, social work, and sociology. The literature represented in this bibliography includes a focus on theory, research, practice, and policy drawn from these as well as other disciplines. As such, the volume lends itself to the transfer of ideas and practice across various branches of the social support intervention field, particularly addressing the requirements of practitioners who may feel they have become limited in their response to social problems by relying on their agencies' traditional ways of meeting client needs. The bibliography is divided into five major headings: Overview and Theory, Research-Physical Health, Research-Mental Health, Intervention, and Professional Roles and Policy, and all entries are consecutively numbered to aid cross-referencing by the Author and Subject Indexes. To further facilitate cross-referencing, many Subject Index terms also have sub-indices. This important reference tool will be welcomed by service providers and planners in gerontology, nursing, psychiatry, psychology, public health, social work, sociology, anthropology, and urban affairs.
About the Author: DAVID E. BIEGEL is the Henry L. Zucker Professor of Social Work Practice, and Director, Practice Demonstration Program, at the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences, Case Western Reserve University. His books iclude Social Networks and Mental Health: An Annotated Bibliography, Building Support Networks for the Elderly, Community Support Systems and Mental Health, and Neighborhood Networks for Human Mental Health Care.
KATHLEEN J. FARKAS is Associate Director of the Practice Demonstration Program and Assistant Professor of Social Work, Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences. She is a contributor to Aging: the Universal Human Experience and The Hospital and the Aged: The New Old Market, among others.
NEIL ABELL is Assistant Professor of Social Work at the Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences. His articles have appeared in Social Work Research and Abstracts.
JACQUELINE GOODIN is a graduate student at the Mandel School.
BRUCE FRIEDMAN is Assistant Professor of Sociology and Social Work at Sacred Heart University in Connecticut.