No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Linguistically challenged
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 February 2016
Abstract
Every day, health and welfare workers translate the needs of the disadvantaged into words that communicate those troubles to others. Such translations (or interpretations) run the risk of reducing or changing the experiences to allow them to fit with the expectations and demands of organisations and bureaucracies. This column draws upon the author’s reflections on a complex and important, but rarely studied, aspect of social welfare practice.
- Type
- Not the last word: point and counterpoint
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1997
References
Lemert, E.
1967, Human deviance, social problems and social conflict, New Jersey. Prentice Hall
Google Scholar
Martin, B.
1992, ‘Secret passwords at the gate of knowledge’, The Australian, 23 SeptemberGoogle Scholar
Passmore, J.
1997, ‘When “customers” might not always be right’, The Australian, 15 JanuaryGoogle Scholar
Simpson, J.
1992, ‘India, where English sings’, The Australian, 3 June (reprinted from The Spectator)Google Scholar