BCSSW Dean Gautam Yadama will present opening remarks and BCSSW faculty and staff members María Piñeros-Leaño, William Byansi, Candace J. Black, Thomas Crea, Maryanne Loughry, and Theresa Betancourt (above) will be among the speakers and moderators.
Archive for May 2024
Education Experiments in Latin America: Empirical Evidence to Guide Evaluation Design
Bullying Victimization, Gender, and Adolescent Substance Use: The Moderating Role of School Connectedness
Healthcare Improvement Scotland: Ageing and frailty standards
BC, Trinity College Dublin hold symposium on forced migration
Missing the Mark? A Typology of Lethal and Non-Lethal Firearm Violence in the Netherlands
Associations between recorded loneliness and adverse mental health outcomes among patients receiving mental healthcare in South London: a retrospective cohort study
The effectiveness of knowledge-sharing techniques and approaches in research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR): a systematic review
Spouses of First Responders: Support for Living With Posttraumatic Stress
Through the extended evolutionary meta-model, and what ACT found there: ACT as a process-based therapy
What enables ‘real social work’ in adult social work? Examining mechanism-based explanations
Meaningful co-production to bring meaningful change: Developing the Allied Health Professionals Dementia Framework for Wales together
An Overview of Homelessness and Human Trafficking in Dublin
Living in the North of England increases risk of death from alcohol, drugs and suicide
Intersectional discrimination and mental health inequalities: a qualitative study of young women’s experiences in Scotland
Repeal the Illegal Migration Act
The Illegal Migration Act 2023 changed the law so that those who arrived in the UK through what the Government determines an ‘illegal route’, will be unable to stay in the UK and will be detained before deportation. The Act serves no positive purpose, is unworkable, and risks breaching domestic and international law. Above: A barge moored in Portland Port, Dorset, set to house 500 men seeking asylum