Browsing by Author "Fleming, Jennie"
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Item Metadata only Am I an educator?(National Writing Project, UC Berkeley, 2003-06-01) Fleming, JennieItem Metadata only The beginning stages of a social action training event(2004-05-01) Fleming, JennieItem Metadata only Building our own monument – a social action group revisited(Taylor & Francis, 2007-03-01) Fleming, Jennie; Arches, J.Item Metadata only Can social capital be a framework for participative evaluation of community health work?(Bristol, The Policy Press, 2005) Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, JennieItem Metadata only The context of risk decisions: does social capital make a difference?(Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research, 2006-01-01) Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, Jennie; Kemshall, Hazel, 1958-Item Metadata only Delivering effective multi-agency work for victims and witnesses of crime(2006-12-01) Knight, Victoria; Fleming, Jennie; Goodman, H.; Skinner, AlisonItem Metadata only Experiences of peer evaluation of the Leicester teenage pregnancy prevention strategy(Wiley, 2009) Fleming, Jennie; Goodman Chong, Hannah; Skinner, AlisonItem Metadata only Facilitation and groupwork tasks in self-directed groupwork(Metapress, 2013) Fleming, Jennie; Ward, David, 1946-Item Metadata only Foster carers undertake research into birth family contact – using the social action research approach(London: Routledge, 2005) Fleming, JennieItem Metadata only How to use a consortium-working approach(London National Children's Bureau, 2010) Fleming, Jennie; Ward, David, 1946-; Yates, ScottItem Metadata only Involving Children and Young People in Health and Social Care Research(Routledge, 2012) Fleming, Jennie; Boeck, T. G.Item Open Access Leicester community development audit final report(2008-01-28T15:38:03Z) Skinner, Alison; Fleming, Jennie; Henderson, PaulThis report presents the findings of an audit of community development work in Leicester. A survey identified 48 organisations employing community development workers and 72 community groups within the city whose activities at some level could be described as community development. Both groups were asked to summarise, among other questions, the range of community development tasks they undertook, their funding sources, issues they covered, types of community group they worked with and ways in which they related to community members. An additional section examined ways in which their work contributed to community cohesion within the city. Most community development workers spent most of their time during a week facilitating consultation between community groups and other organisations/agencies. Their key issues were equal opportunity work, community cohesion and education and training. Community groups had far less secure funding sources than employed community workers and were classified as demonstrating high, medium and low levels of community development in their work. Those working at ‘high’ and ‘medium’ levels demonstrated some convergence with employed community workers in the type of issues worked on although the groups they targeted differed.Item Metadata only Methodology and practical application of the social action research model(London, Routledge, 2004) Ward, David, 1946-; Fleming, JennieItem Metadata only Participative evaluation(Russell House Press, 2002) Fleming, JennieItem Metadata only Partnership working for victims of crime(Routledge, 2006) Goodman, H.; Fleming, Jennie; Skinner, Alison; Williams, BrianItem Metadata only Pathways into and out of crime for young people(2006-07) Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, Jennie; Kemshall, Hazel, 1958-Item Metadata only Person-centred support - What service users and practitioners say.(Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2008) Glynn, Michael; Beresford, Peter; Bewley, Catherine; Branfield, Fran; Butt, J.; Croft, Suzie; Dattani Pitt, K.; Fleming, Jennie; Flynn, R.; Patmore, C.; Postle, K.; Turner, MichaelItem Metadata only Risk, youth and moving on.(2009) Kemshall, Hazel, 1958-; Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, JennieItem Metadata only The role of social capital and resources in resilience to risk.(Jessica Kingsley, 2011) Boeck, T. G.; Fleming, JennieItem Open Access Self-directed Groupwork: social justice though social action and empowerment(Policy Press, 2017-03-01) Fleming, Jennie; Ward, David, 1946-Self-directed Groupwork and its values and methodology have taken root in a range of disciplines and in peer, volunteer and professionally facilitated groups addressing a diverse range of issues and across many countries. It has promoted and sustained the mind-set and practices needed for achieving social justice through social action and community empowerment. Addressing in particular the theories which have informed Self-directed Groupwork, we show that Self-directed Groupwork is alive and well, but argue that it is vital to re-engage with the core vision and mission and to re-energise open and honest collaboration with community members and users of services as partners in change. .