ORCID Profile
0000-0003-0753-194X
Current Organisation
University of South Australia
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Publisher: Routledge
Date: 08-03-2022
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 04-05-2017
Publisher: Springer Nature Singapore
Date: 23-12-2023
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 19-09-2022
DOI: 10.1177/00208728221123165
Abstract: Along with the logistic planning, the important focus of international student mobility programmes in social work is on the field supervision process and measuring its outcome. Without a social work council in India for setting uniform standards in field education, this paper proposes a framework for field supervision to support inbound mobility students in India. The study predominantly explores the qualitative experiences of field supervisors from India, Israel, and Australia on fieldwork supervision. The themes evolved from the study are focused on the supervision process, strategies followed, challenges faced, and outcome measurement.
Publisher: Georgia Southern University
Date: 07-2012
Publisher: Routledge
Date: 20-07-2017
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 06-06-2018
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 25-03-2019
Publisher: Routledge
Date: 08-03-2022
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 02-09-2019
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 12-10-2020
Publisher: Springer Singapore
Date: 2020
Publisher: Institution of Engineering and Technology
Date: 27-04-2020
DOI: 10.1049/PBHE023E_CH8
Publisher: ACCB Publishing
Date: 28-11-2022
Abstract: The stark reality of human existence with a predictable 90 per cent of most reported cases emerging from these showcases of development, urbanisation, and industrialisation — our cities and towns tell us something that we cannot ignore. The cities took the brunt and revelled as the epicentres of the pandemic and a public health disaster, with the lockdowns remaining prolonged, severe, and even punitive in many cities of the world. We discuss here, the impacts of unprecedented crisis as we continue to rely on a globalised economy, and gaze at the helplessness with which the state handles our lives and appears to compromise our destinies through in a market full of uneven players. COVID-19 first hit the global power centres, the developed nations, and the business capitals in developing countries. Excited holidaymakers cruising passenger returnees from Ruby Princess began infecting others and those others infected capital cities like Sydney and Melbourne, Australia. It is intriguing and highly disturbing that how responsibility for a disease that travelled across borders with passports and through commercial airlines came to be laid at the poor of Mumbai’s slums or Brazil’s favelas. It is really the well-off and the powerful who seem to rule the roost in cities. The density of populations in urban habitats and the intensity of local and global interconnectivity have made these urban habitats clearly more vulnerable to the spread of the virus. Be it the social housing that is vertical for low-income earners in Melbourne or the urban sprawls of Dharavi, Mumbai evidence suggests that density per se correlated to higher virus transmission.
Publisher: Springer Nature Singapore
Date: 2023
No related grants have been discovered for Kalpana Goel.