Historia Del Trabajo Social Eli Evangelista Ramirez Ed Plaza Y Valdes Mexico 2001 Fixed !!link!!
Specific on Elí Evangelista Ramírez and his impact on Mexican academia.
Focuses on the institutionalization of social aid after the Mexican Revolution, leading to the first formal recognition of the profession. Specific on Elí Evangelista Ramírez and his impact
Author: Eli Evangelista Ramírez Publisher: Plaza y Valdés Location: México Year: 2001 Evangelista Ramírez dedicates significant space to the Casa
in coordination with the UNAM, is a foundational text that reconstructs the professional identity of social work from 1521 to the late 20th century. : Evangelista Ramírez emphasizes that the field's history
Evangelista Ramírez dedicates significant space to the Casa de la Misericordia and the Beneficencia Pública in 19th-century Mexico. She argues that charity in the colonial and early republican periods was a moral, religious duty, not a technical profession. This section is crucial for understanding the ideological rupture that professionalization would later bring.
: Evangelista Ramírez emphasizes that the field's history is "complex and contradictory," as social workers often had to balance their professional ethics with the rigid social assistance policies of the government. 5. Final Reflections: A Modern Identity