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OverviewAn introduction to the law for human services, the fourth edition of Integrating Human Service Law, Ethics and Practice offers an overview of the legal processes encountered in practice. The text offers an accessible discussion of law and ethics to provide students with an understanding of the Australian legal landscape and an understanding of human service ethics.The new edition provides an inclusive approach to teaching law and ethics to students, easily demonstrating how to translate the theory into practice. Written by an expert author team, the book provides a unified understanding on the relationship between law, ethics and human practice.KEY FEATURESImproved book navigation, including a table in the introduction relating populations and issues to the relevant chaptersFully updated law and human services material, with ‘Law in Practice’ boxes highlighting relevant and interesting casesChapter objectives, Reflect and Law in Practice boxes, and Key Points for Practice prepare students to understand the connections between legal processes and ethical considerations. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Rosemary Kennedy (, Psychologist, MAPS Human Service Consultant) , Jenny Richards (, Lecturer, School of Law, Flinders University) , Tania Leiman (, Associate Dean, Senior Lecturer of Law, Flinders Law School, Flinders University)Publisher: Oxford University Press Australia Imprint: OUP Australia and New Zealand Edition: 4th Revised edition Dimensions: Width: 19.10cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 24.60cm Weight: 0.672kg ISBN: 9780190302726ISBN 10: 0190302720 Pages: 360 Publication Date: 04 August 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsForewordList of Figures and TablesAuthors’ AcknowledgmentsPublisher AcknowledgmentsIntroduction About this book: Its origins and aimsOur audienceDefining the human servicesTerminologyAssumptions about legal knowledgeBook structure: Finding materialPositions reiterated and elaborated Part 1: Relationship between Human Service Practice,Law and Ethics Law and the Human Services: Together and Apart Client problems and beyond Integration: Who, what and why? Human service client, worker, and agency issues Intersection and overlap between law and human services Human services in a risk society Law and human services: An uneasy coexistence Law, Ethics, and Other Factors in Decision Making Integrating legal and other imperatives in human service practice The exercise of decision- making power and administrative law principles Influences on human service worker decision making These influences in interaction Making integrated decisions in practice Part 2: Legal Obligations, Rights, and Regulationof Human Service Workers Professional, Business, and Employment Matters Behind the scenes of service delivery Professional profile Taking care of business Contract law Contracts and the human services Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) Managing Information What does ‘managing information’ mean? Interaction of human service practice, ethics and law Collecting (or acquiring) and amending personal information Recording information Storing informationPermitting or denying access to information Legal imperatives to protect information Legal imperatives to disclose information or permit access to it Electronic and digital records and communications Whistleblowing Courts, Tribunals, and the Human Service Images and anxieties Courts, similar bodies, and dispute resolution Scope of human service activity in courts and tribunals Range of courts Range of tribunals Ombudsmen and complaints bodies Court processes, evidence, and witnesses Preparing court and tribunal reports Preparing to appear Giving evidence Accompanying others attending court Getting It Wrong Accountable practice More than a legal duty of care Incompetence, mishaps, breaking the rules, and more Rules and standards of conduct in the human services Complaints and investigatory bodies A mosaic of expectations, risks and possible outcomes Part 3: Service Delivery: Diverse Populationsand Jurisdictions Crimes and Victims Introducing the criminal justice system Criminal law in Australia Assisting people charged with offences Sentencing Indigenous Australians and the criminal law Young people and the criminal law Victims of crime Criminal law and family violence Families and Children An interdisciplinary perspective required Child protection in Australia Child protection proceedings Family Law Family law and arrangements for children Family violence and family law Property orders Child support Housing and Finance The law and more Income support Complaints, review and appeal Income management (IM) Debt management Consumer protection Housing, homelessness and accommodation Diversity and Vulnerability Rights, needs and protections Facilitating social well- being through law Guardianship and administration Mental illness Refugees and asylum seekers Emerging matters of vulnerability, difference and the law Back to the Beginning while Facing the Future Contradictions and volatility in the big picture Implications for the human services In pursuit of confidence with law and justice partnershipsAccomplished human service work and workers Appendix: Finding, Reading, and Citing Law Finding and reading an Act of Parliament How to find cases How to read cases Citing legislation and cases IndexReviewsAuthor InformationRosemary Kennedy, Psychologist, MAPS Human Service Consultant Jenny Richards, Lecturer, Faculty of Education, Humanities and Law, Flinders Law School Tania Leiman, Associate Dean, Teaching and Learning, Director of First Year Studies, Faculty of Education, Humanities and Law, Flinders Law School, Senior Lecturer of Law. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |