Administration and Management
	Social work administrators are proactive leaders in  public  and private agencies that provide services to clients. Many  elements of this area of social work practice are common to  administration in other organizations. However, administration and  management also require knowledge about social policy  and the delivery  of social services, vision for future planning,  an understanding of  human behavior, and commitment to  social work ethics and  values.
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Advocacy & Community Organizing
	Advocacy is one of the keystones of social work  practice.  Social work advocates champion the rights of individuals and  communities with the goal of achieving social justice. Community  organizing and advocacy work with the power of numbers—many people  thinking, working, and acting together—to counterbalance wealthy and  powerful groups and the means they have to protect and extend  themselves. 
Historically, community organizing and social work were  responses to the many forces that created inequality in our society.  They remain as necessary and effective as ever  today.
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Aging
	Social workers link older adults with services that  help them live independently and with dignity, thereby maximizing their  quality of life and participation in society. Social work with older  adults focuses on the physical, psychological, social, and economic  aspects of daily living.
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Child Welfare
	Child welfare social workers serve some of the most  vulnerable children, youths, and families. Social workers specialize in  building on the strengths of families and helping them to provide a safe  and nurturing  environment for children and youths. 
However, when  families are unable to do this, social workers must intervene to protect  the children from harm. Child welfare social workers ensure that  children and youths who have experienced abuse or neglect are supported  through a range of  services.
Developmental Disabilities
	Social workers also help parents of children with  developmental  disabilities understand  their  legal  rights. They help  parents learn to be advocates and find special services that enable  their children to be as independent as possible.
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Health Care
	Since the early 1900s, professionally trained social  workers have helped people deal  with personal and social factors that  affect health and wellness. Some health care social workers are in  direct services and concentrate on individuals, families, and small  groups. 
Others work in settings where the focus is on planning,  administration, and  policy. In the health care setting, social workers  may conduct research, develop  programs, and administer social work  and other  departments.
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International Social Work
	The functions of social work in international  development are diverse. They include  direct services in communities,  refugee camps, orphanages, hospitals, and schools, as well as  supporting the efforts of national governments, intergovernmental  organizations, and non-governmental organizations to enhance social  well-being.
Justice and Corrections
	Social workers who work in justice and corrections  can be found in courts, rape crisis centers, police departments, and  correctional facilities.
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Mental Health and Clinical Social Work
	Clinical social workers are one of the nation’s  largest groups of providers of mental health services. They provide  mental health services in both urban and rural settings, where they may  be the only licensed provider of mental  health services available.
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Mental Health and Substance Use Social Work
	Social workers help individuals, families, and  communities find ways to recover from substance use. They provide a much-needed ecological perspective to treatment that focuses on the  client in relation to family and neighborhood environments, community  support systems, cultural attitudes, and policies. 
Consequently, social  workers trained  in treating alcohol, tobacco, and other drug addictions can be found doing case management, group and individual therapy, family counseling, advocacy for jobs and housing needs, community resource development, education, and policy making.
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Occupational and Employee Assistance Program (EAP) Social Work
	Occupational social workers help organizations  re-engineer their structure and methods to improve efficiency,  creativity, productivity, and morale. They may also work for a union and  be involved in job counseling or organizing.
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Policy and Planning
	Social workers analyze policies, programs, and  regulations to see what is most effective. They identify social  problems, study needs and related issues, conduct research, propose  legislation, and suggest alternative approaches or new programs. They  may foster coalitions of groups with similar interests and develop   organizational networks.
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Politics
	There is a natural progression in the careers of many  social workers from activism to leadership. Increasingly social workers  are holding elective offices from school boards to city and  county  governments, from state legislatures all the way to the U.S. House of  Representatives and the Senate. Social workers also play leadership  roles in local, state and federal agencies.
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Public Welfare
	Social work in public welfare entails planning,  administering,  and financing programs, training and supervising staff,  and setting and evaluating standards and criteria for service delivery.  Public welfare offers many challenges that require creative thinking and  leadership from professional social  workers.
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Research
	Social workers in research typically tend to be  academics with postgraduate degrees in social work. Research provides  the framework for effective practice. Although considered an art  by  some, social work is also a science based on  evidence.
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School Social Work
	School social workers act as the connection for  school, home, and community services to help children with emotional,  developmental, and educational needs. Most school social workers  practice in public and private schools, although a small percentage may  work  in social services agencies or other service sites such as a  preschool program or residential treatment center for children who are  emotionally  disturbed.
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