The Contribution of Mixed Methods Research to the Field of Childhood Trauma: A Narrative Review Focused on Data Integration
Looking Down or Looking Up: Status and Subjective Well-Being among Asian and Latino Immigrants in the United States
Research Review: Social motivation and oxytocin in autism – implications for joint attention development and intervention
Unauthorized Immigration to the United States: Annual Estimates and Components of Change, by State, 1990 to 2010
Predictors of study setting (primary care vs. hospital setting) among studies of the effectiveness of brief interventions among heavy alcohol users: A systematic review
The Clash between Social Policy and Traditional Values: Unmet Welfare Needs Sustained by the Culture of Familism in South Korea
Social Work with Children and Families: Getting into practice (3rd edition) by I. Butler and C. Hickman, Jessica Kingsley Publishers, London, 2011. 302pp. ISBN 978-1-84310-598-5 (Pbk), £19.99
Alternative care options and policy choices to support orphans: The case of Mozambique in the context of the SADC
Systematic Reviews to Support Evidence-based Medicine (2nd edition) by Khalid Khan, Regina Kunz, Jos Kleijnen and Gerd Antes: A Review
Clasen, Jochen ; Clegg, Daniel (eds.). Regulating the risk of unemployment: National adaptations to post-industrial labour markets in Europe. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2011. xx, 404 pp. ISBN 978-0-19-959229-6.
The Broken Village: Coffee, Migration, and Globalization in Honduras by Daniel R. Reichman. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press (ILR Press), 2011.
Practitioner Review: The victims and juvenile perpetrators of child sexual abuse–assessment and intervention
Factors Impacting Market Occupancy of Non-profit Human Service Organizations in the Public Social Service Market: Focused on an Individual Level
Gaps in social protection for health care and long-term care in Europe: Are the elderly faced with financial ruin?
Solidarity in Deed: Poor People’s Organizations, Unions, and the Politics of Antipoverty Work in Ontario
The Achilles’ heel of scale service design in social security administration: The case of the United Kingdom’s Universal Credit