Historia Del Trabajo Social Eli Evangelista Ramirez Ed Plaza Y Valdes Mexico 2001 Fixed [RECOMMENDED | Pick]
The is more than a book title—it is a scholarly anchor. In an era of fleeting digital information, this fixed edition offers reliability. For any student or professional seeking to understand why Mexican social work looks the way it does today (with its blend of community organizing, clinical casework, and policy advocacy), Eli Evangelista Ramírez’s work remains the definitive starting point.
Published in 2001 by the prestigious Ediciones Plaza y Valdés in Mexico City, this particular edition of Historia del Trabajo Social remains a "fixed" point of reference. Unlike digital resources that may change or disappear, this physical and bibliographically stable text provides a canonical narrative that continues to shape curricula across Ibero-America. The is more than a book title—it is a scholarly anchor
One of the central narratives of the book is the transition from "Beneficence" (charity) to "Social Action" and finally to professional Social Work. Ramírez dissects how the Catholic tradition of charity in the 19th century was eventually supplanted by a secular, state-led approach to social problems in the early 20th century. She argues that the professionalization of Social Work was not an isolated event but a requirement of a modernizing state that needed technical solutions to social marginalization. Published in 2001 by the prestigious Ediciones Plaza
El movimiento latinoamericano que buscó romper con el colonialismo intelectual y dotar a la carrera de un sentido político y transformador. 4. ¿Por qué es relevante el año 2001? Ramírez dissects how the Catholic tradition of charity







