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ABSTRACT

This article reopens the historic debate about the roles of micro and macro practice in social work and encourages the profession to find ways to achieve a better balance between case and cause in education, practice, and research. To this end, it traces the history of the case versus cause debate including conceptual frameworks for rebalancing social work education: Bertha Capen Reynolds, C. Wright Mills, and William Schwartz, highlights three alternative approaches for resolving the dualism put forward over the years; separation, merger and interconnection; and identifies four model that help to bridge the gap by taking both the individual and the social structures into account: ecological, financial capabilities, trauma theory and oppression. This historical analysis offers promising directions for the social work profession as it tackles 21st–century social challenges, including growing inequality and austerity–driven public policies.

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Notes on contributors

Mimi Abramovitz

Mimi Abramovitz is Bertha Capen Reynolds Professor of Social Policy at Hunter College. Margaret S. Sherraden is Founders Professor at University of Missouri-St. Louis and research professor at Washington University in St. Louis.

Margaret S. Sherraden

Mimi Abramovitz is Bertha Capen Reynolds Professor of Social Policy at Hunter College. Margaret S. Sherraden is Founders Professor at University of Missouri-St. Louis and research professor at Washington University in St. Louis.

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