Social development work takes place in the grey area between government
and the voluntary and community sectors. This book, written by three
well-known educators and researchers in the social policy and
development field, explores the ways in which front-line professionals
working with communities identify and address the dilemmas inherent in
the current policy context. Drawing upon original material, the authors
examine how 'community engagement' workers negotiate the ethical and
emotional challenges they face; how they work through problems of
community representation at interpersonal and team levels; how they
manage the conflicting roles of local activist and paid worker and what
role colleagues, management and others play when responding to such
challenges. The dilemmas of development work reconnects to, and updates,
an important tradition in social policy which explores the dilemmas of
'street-level' work. It draws on contemporary political theory and
current debates concerning the modernisation of governance and
psycho-social perspectives on identity, values and agency. Combining
theory and practice, it will appeal to practitioners, policy makers and
undergraduates in social and public policy.