Occupational therapies without borders v. 2 Towards an ecology of occupation-based practices

Occupational therapies without borders v. 2 Towards an ecology of occupation-based practices

Kronenberg, Frank
Pollard, Nick
Sakellariou, Dikaios

36,56 €(IVA inc.)

The companion text to Occupational Therapy without Borders - Volume 1: learning from the spirit of survivors!In this landmark text writers from around the world discuss a plurality of occupation-based approaches that explicitly acknowledge the full potential of the art and science of occupational therapy. The profession is presented as a political possibilities-based practice, concernedwith what matters most to people in real life contexts, generating practice-based evidence to complement evidence-based practice. As these writers demonstrate, occupational therapies are far more than, as some critical views have suggested, a monoculture of practice rooted in Western modernity.Nobel Peace Laureate Desmond Tutu captures the ethos of this book, which essentially calls forengagements in the service of a purpose that is larger than the advancement of our profession's interests:"Your particular approach to advancing our wellbeing and health strikes me as both unique and easily taken for granted. Whilst you value and work with medical understandings, your main aim seems to go beyond these. You seem to enable people to appreciate more consciously how what wedo to and with ourselves and others on a daily basis impacts on our individual and collective wellbeing. As occupational therapists you have a significant contribution to make [.] allowing people from all walks of life to contribute meaningfully to the wellbeing of others." INDICE: Foreword by Desmond M TutuForeword by Marilyn Pattison Preface Dedication Acknowledgments List of contributors 1 Introduction: courage to dance politics Frank Kronenberg, Nick Pollard, Elelwani RamugondoSECTION 1 DISCOURSES WITHOUT BORDERS 2 Pecket Learning Community Pat Smart, Gillian Frost, Pauline Nugent, Nick Pollard3 Meeting the needs for occupational therapy in Gaza Barbara Lavin4 Manchester survivors poetry and the performance persona Rosie LugosiRosie Garland5 Treating adolescent substance abuse through a perspective of occupational cultivation Jesse Vogel6 Occupational therapy in the social field: concepts and critical considerations Sandra Maria Galheigo7 An ethos that transcends borders Suzanne M. Peloquin8 Participatory Occupational Justice Framework (POJF) 2010: enabling occupational participation and inclusionGail Whiteford, Elizabeth Townsend9 Situated meaning: a matter of cultural safety, inclusion, and occupational therapy Michael K. Iwama, Nicole A. Thomson, Rona M. Macdonald10 Spirituality in the lives of marginalized children Imelda Burgman11 Occupational therapy in Asia: becoming an inclusive, relevant,and progressive profession Kee Hean Lim, R. Lyle Duque12 Influencing social challenges through occupational performance Moses N. Ikiugu13 (Re)habilitation and (re)positioning the powerful expert and the sick person Mershen Pillay14 Foucault, power, and professional identities Hazel Mackey15 Occupational therapists - permanent persuaders in emerging roles? Nick PollardSECTION 2 PRACTICES WITHOUT BORDERS 16 Rebuilding lives and societies through occupation in post-conflict areas andhighly marginalized settings Rachel Thibeault17 The CETRAM community: building links for social change Daniela Alburquerque, Pedro Chana, CETRAM Community18 Community publishing Nick Pollard, Stephen Parks19 Enabling play in the context of rapid social change Elelwani Ramugondo, Althea Barry20 Natural disasters: challenging occupational therapists Nancy A. Rushford, Kerry A. Thomas21 Ubuntourism: engaging divided people in post-apartheid South Africa Frank Kronenberg, Elelwani Ramugondo22 Brazilian experiences in social occupational therapyDenise Dias Barros, Maria Isabel Garcez Ghirardi, Roseli Esquerdo Lopes, Sandra Maria Galheigo23 From kites to kitchens: collaborative community-based occupational therapy with refugee survivors of tortureMary Black24 Argentina: social participation, activities, and courses of action Liliana Paganizzi, Elisabeth Gomez Mengelberg25 Crossing borders in correctional institutions Jaime Philip Mun~oz, Louise Farnworth, Toby Ballou Hamilton, Sandra Rogers, John A. White, Gina Marie Prioletti26 Occupational apartheid and national parks: the Shiretoko World Heritage Site Mark J. Hudson, Mami Aoyama27 The Kawa (river) model:culturally responsive occupational therapy without borders Michael Iwama, Hanif Farhan, Erin Hanrahan, Avital Kaufman, Alison Nelson, Neha Patel28 Human occupation as a tool for understanding and promoting social justice Gary Kielhofner, Carmen Gloria de las Heras, Yolanda Suarez-Balcazar29 A reflective journey and exploration of the human spirit Grace Patricia Mary Cairns, Candice Joy Mes (Harvett)30 PAR FORE: a community-based occupational therapy program Alexander Lopez, Pamela BlockSECTION 3 EDUCATION AND RESEARCH WITHOUT BORDERS 31 Eastern Europe an transition countries: capacity development for social reform Hanneke van Bruggen32 Practice learning environments and student empowerment Joan Healey33 Nature of political reasoning as a foundation for engagement Jo-Celene De Jongh, Farhana Firfirey, Lucia Hess-April, Elelwani Ramugondo, NeeltjeSmit, Lana Van Niekerk34 Research, community-based projects, and teaching as a sharing construction: the Metuia Project in Brazil Denise Dias Barros, Roseli Esquerdo Lopes, Sandra Maria Galheigo, Debora Galvani35 From altruism to participation: bridging academia and borderlands Anne Shordike, Shirley Peganoff O'Brien, Amy Marshall36 An occupational justice research perspective Pamela K.Richardson, Anne MacRae37 Domestic workers' narratives: transforming occupational therapy practice Roshan Galvaan38 Universities and the global change: inclusive communities, gardening, and citizenship Salvador Simo39 An occupationalperspective on participatory action researchWendy Bryant, Elizabeth McKay, Peter Beresford, Geraldine Vacher40 Researching to learn: embracing occupationaljustice to understand Cambodian children and childhoodsMelina T. Czymoniewicz-Klippel41 Occupational injustice in Pakistani families with disabled childrenin the UK: a PAR study Debbie Kramer-Roy42 The occupation of city walking: crossing the invisible line Teresa Cassani Danner, Charlotte Royeen, Karen Barney, Sarah R. Walsh, Matin RooyenIndex

  • ISBN: 978-0-7020-3103-8
  • Editorial: Churchill Livingstone
  • Encuadernacion: Rústica
  • Páginas: 432
  • Fecha Publicación: 16/11/2010
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés