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  3. Vol. 5 No. 2 (2004)

Vol. 5 No. 2 (2004)

Published: 2004-11-30

Full Issue

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Editorial

  • Seeing the Panorama of Social Work

    James G. Daley
    i-ii
    • PDF

Articles

  • The Struggle to Survive: The Power of Partnerships in the Quest for Nonprofit Sustainability

    Karl Besel, Ngoan Hoang, Richard Cloud, Seana Golder, Linda Bledsoe, Patrick McKiernan
    139-149
    • PDF
  • Factors That Influence Domestic Violence Practice Self-Efficacy: Implications for Social Work

    Fran Danis
    150-161
    • PDF
  • Cross-cultural Differences in Preferred Forms of Address: Implications for Work with African American Adults

    Wanda Lott Collins, Sharon E. Moore
    163-171
    • PDF
  • Views of Reference List Accuracy from Social Work Journal Editors and Published Authors

    Scott E. Wilks, Christina A. Spivey
    172-181
    • PDF
  • Why Conduct a Spiritual Assessment? A Theoretical Foundation for Assessment

    David R. Hodge
    183-196
    • PDF
  • Teaching Content on Social Work Practice with Religious Congregations: A Curriculum Module

    Michael Sherr, Terry Wolfer
    197-210
    • PDF
  • Equal Access to Justice in a Rural Western State

    Monte Miller
    210-224
    • PDF

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Advances in Social Work
ISSN: 1527-8565
eISSN: 2331-4125

Land Acknowledgement. We acknowledge the Indiana University School of Social Work is located on the ancestral lands of Indigenous Peoples from time immemorial. Indiana is the traditional lands of Potawatomi, Illini, Miami, Kickapoo, Lenape/Delaware, Wea, Piankashaw, Shawnee, Nanticoke, and Wyandot. We are dedicated to amplifying Indigenous voices and perspectives, improving community relationships, correcting the narratives, and making the Indiana University School of Social Work supportive and inclusive places for Native and Indigenous students, faculty, and staff. With humility and respect, we at Indiana University School of Social Work recognize and honor all Indigenous Peoples, their histories, their political rights and sovereignty and their sacred ties to the land and waters.

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