Social Policy
Relationship Between Society, Business, and Government
Society, business, and government, are three dynamic forces that if viewed deeply can present relationship between each other. This is because all of these three elements are governed by laws that are specifically meant for every citizen of a nation, which in turn comprises the society, which in turn creates the businesses, as well as establish the government through voting system.
The first of these three elements is the society. Society is related to businesses because it is them who are the major reasons why each and every business exists. That is, the objective of every business is to provide service and to please the society with their needs. On the other hand, society is related to government because it is the society that decides who are the people that they will let to comprise the government. Moreover, the laws that the government creates are generally based and focused to provide the society with peaceful environment and good social conditions. For the second element which is the business, and the third element which is the government, the relationship to society and between each other is similar as how the relationship of society with business and government was described.
The relationship of this dynamic system can be seen in the past 9/11 attack at the World Trade Center. All of the three elements, the society, business, and government, were involved and aggravated in the incident. First of all, it was the international relationship and activities of the U.S. government that was the main reason why the attack was committed. To communicate the disagreement of the terrorist party to the government, what they did was to hamper and injure the businesses in U.S., particularly the World Trade Center which is located in the main business district of America. Consequently, from such attack to businesses as the terrorists' way to communicate their anger to the U.S. government, the society was the main element who received and experienced the harm.
Social work history displays that the desire of social justice is both a task and a myth for employees and their immediate predecessors in organizations. This study provides a critical analysis of Janet Finn's and Maxine Jacobson's work titled "Just Practice." The great focus is on the first and the third chapter where their contributions and critical omissions are identified. Finn and Jacobson have worked hard to illustrate the historical
social policy and economic policy? Social policy refers to guidelines, principles, legislation and activities that concern the way that humans live and interact. According to the Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy at Harvard University it refers to "public policy and practice in the areas of health care, human services, criminal justice, inequality, education, and labor."[1] Another way that one can perceive social policy is that it is a cluster of
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For example, in discussing his childhood in "Southie" a poor neighborhood in Boston, Patrick MacDonald talks about the willful ignorance of the people in the neighborhood when he was a child. "They were all here now, all of my neighbors and friends who had died young from violence, drugs, and from the other deadly things we'd been taught didn't happen in Southie" (MacDonald, 1999, p.2). In other words, the
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