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Some professionals and universities consider social policy a subset of public policy, while other practitioners characterize social policy and public policy to be two separate, competing approaches for the same public interest (similar to MD and DO in healthcare), with social policy deemed more holistic than public policy. Whichever of these persuasions a university adheres to, social policy begins with the study of the welfare state and social services. It consists of guidelines, principles, legislation and associated activities that affect the living conditions conducive to human welfare, such as a person's quality of life. The Department of Social Policy at the London School of Economics defines social policy as "an interdisciplinary and applied subject concerned with the analysis of societies' responses to social need", which seeks to foster in its students a capacity to understand theory and evidence drawn from a wide range of social science disciplines, including economics, sociology, psychology, geography, history, law, philosophy and political science. The Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy at Harvard University describes social policy as "public policy and practice in the areas of health care, human services, criminal justice, inequality, education, and labor". Social policy might also be described as actions that affect the well-being of members of a society through shaping the distribution of and access to goods and resources in that society. Social policy often deals with wicked problems. The discussion of 'social policy' in the United States and Canada can also apply to governmental policy on social issues such as tackling racism, LGBT issues (such as same-sex marriage) and the legal status of abortion, guns, euthanasia, recreational drugs and prostitution. In other countries, these issues would be classified under health policy and domestic policy. The study of social policy can either be a stand-alone degree at providers such as the University of Birmingham, University of York, Oxford University, and the University of Pennsylvania, a specialization as part of a public policy degree program such as at McGill University, Balsillie School of International Affairs, Harris School of Public Policy, and the Hertie School of Governance, or a joint degree along with a similar related degree in social work or public health such as at George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis. In the Global South, social policy is offered along with public policy degree programmes, as at the Institute of Public Policy, National Law School of India University, Bangalore, combined with development policy. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works about social policy 37
Law of Free Birth
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Internationales Handwörterbuch des Gewerkschaftswesens
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Job creation schemes and the capitalist state : Marxist analysis of job creation schemes, 1890-1912 and 1930-1935
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Policy implications of new reproductive technologies : social impact assessment and technology assessment as tools for policy analysis
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The Effectiveness of People with Disabilities in the Policy Making Process: The Total Mobility Scheme Example
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Policy analysis using microsimulation
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The implications for low income single women of New Zealand government housing policy reform
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Provision of Public Leisure Services: Implications of New Zealand Local Government Reforms
The Vision of the Anointed: Self-Congratulation as a Basis for Social Policy
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A study of the factors which contribute to success for Mā ori women in tertiary education
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Identity crisis: social sustainability, identity and the domestic purposes benefit
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Discourses of Community in New Zealand Health Policy
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Social Work: Policy and Practice
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Social policy in a Christian frame of meaning : a world-view, ethic and theoretical framework for the analysis, choice, & design of social policy
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Ethnic peoples in Aotearoa/New Zealand : towards effective participation in the development of social policy
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Futurority : narratives of the future
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Spatial Constraints on Residency as an Instrument of Employment Policy: the Experience of Limited Employment Locations in New Zealand
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Climate calculus : does realist theory explain the Howard Government's decision not to ratify the Kyoto Protocol?
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Community small scale wind farms for New Zealand: a comparative study of Austrian development, with consideration for New Zealand's future wind energy development
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Youth development, Maui styles : Kia tipu te rito o te pa harakeke, Tikanga and ahuatanga as a basis for a positive Maori youth development approach
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Motivation for change in the discipline of children
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Change in juvenile justice policy: implications for rights and responsibilities
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Great transformations : Karl Polanyi and Nikolas Rose on the shifting fortunes of social strategies of government
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Social policy approaches to Hurricane Katrina and the Christchurch Earthquakes
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Paradox Lost? Four Theoretical Perspectives on Whānau Ora
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The Global Financial Crisis and the Problem of Unemployment: A Regulationist Approach
L'État social. Pour sortir du chaos néolibéral
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To what degree do the in-work tax credit policies introduced in New Zealand (2006) and Sweden (2007) contribute to the wellbeing of sole mothers?
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He iwi moke, he whanokē : iwi social services, policy and practice
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Sea-change : negotiating the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities - a New Zealand perspective
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The journey of Pūao-te-Ata-tū : what did we learn?
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Making sense of child protection practice: Enabling transformational change
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