This page has useful resources for all Social Workers involved in Mental Health.

AMHP Quarterly Conferences

The Greater Manchester AMHP host quarterly conferences to enable participants to come and share their research, experience, learning and updates. These events are open across all our partners in Greater Manchester, providing learning and networking opportunities.

The next conference will be Wednesday 23rd April 2025

The theme for this conference is:

“EATING DISORDERS AND LESS RESTRICTIVE OPTIONS”

Sessions include:

  • EATING DISORDERS KEYNOTE: TBC
  • HOME BASE TREATMENT TEAM
  • VCSE COLLEAGUES
  • GROUP CASE STUDIES
  • 7 HOURS CPD (CERTIFICATE INC)

Venue: Radcliffe Football club

Registration by nomination only, please speak with your manager to secure a place.

Advocacy

Advocacy is taking action to help people say what they want, secure their rights, represent their interests, and obtain the services they need.

Advocacy might mean getting support from another person to help you express your views and wishes, and help you stand up for your rights. This is the role of an Advocate.

Our Advocates work in partnership with the people they support and are independent from social services and the NHS.

At Gaddum we provide a culturally appropriate advocacy service for people experiencing mental health needs.

The Mental Capacity Law and Policy website.

This site is borne out of a desire to promote better, clearer thinking amongst lawyers, policy-makers and professionals as to mental capacity law and practice.  It is created by Alex Ruck Keene, a practising barrister, writer and educator specialising in mental capacity law.   Whilst it comes at the issues it raises from a legal perspective, it is fuelled by a desire to bring together insights and expertise from the worlds of legal practice, academia, clinical research, social work practice, third sector advocacy, and the wider policy community.

The site does not pretend or promise to be a one-stop shop: these exist elsewhere.  Nor does (or can) it offer legal advice.  But it aims to start discussions and provoke questions about received wisdom.

There is a specific area exploring the process of the Mental Health Act reform:

Mental Health Law Online.

This website allows user to subscribe to a monthly update on new case-law judgement and blogposts. There is also an email discussion forum that users can subscribe to.

The Critical AMHP.

A reflective and critical space where Approved Mental Health Professionals and other interested parties can write and read about any aspect of approved mental health practice in all its guts and glory. The blog invites the sharing of ideas, research and opinion from relational, social and rights-based perspectives with the aim of contributing to a renewed and vibrant focus on practice and service improvement at the interface of the Mental Health Act.  

39 Essex Chambers Mental Capacity Resources

Chambers has developed an unrivalled set of resources for those seeking to apply and understand the Mental Capacity Act 2005, as well as to understand the place of mental capacity within the law more generally.  This section of the website gathers together three sets of resources: (1) our caselaw database, which summarises and comments upon the cases decided by the Court of Protection (and other courts considering the MCA); (2) our Mental Capacity Reports, free, monthly, reports covering all areas of law and practice relating to the MCA; and (3) our wider resources, including our guidance notes to assessing capacity and best interests, and articles written by members of the Court of Protection team). 

Mental Health Cop.

A blog published by a retired police inspector that considers the policing perspective on mental Health.  The site has a regular ‘Mental Capacity Matters’ podcast which is also available through Apple and Audible Podcasts.

Copyright © 2023 GMSWA | All rights reserved Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

How is racism understood in literature about the experiences of black and minority ethnic social work students in Britain? A Conceptual review.​

Dr Dharman Jeyasingham and Dr Julie Morton (Social Work Education, 38 (5), pp 563-575)

Abstract

This article presents findings from a study which explored the everyday ways race works on social work programmes in England. The study focused on how race was spoken about and conceptualised, how people were categorised and ordered according to race and the social interactions where race was understood by participants to be significant. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight social work lecturers and nineteen black social work students at two universities in England, to explore the following topics: classroom-based and practice learning, assessment and feedback, interactions between students and between students and educators, and university and practice agency cultures. Data were analysed using thematic analysis and the following themes identified: the routine interpellation of black students and communities in terms of absolute cultural differences, black students’ everyday experiences of marginalisation, hostility and othering, and the racialisation of black students in judgements made about their academic and practice performance. The article concludes that social work education must engage more deeply with contemporary theorisations of race and culture, and that social work educators need a reflexive understanding of how notions such as diversity, equality and universal academic standards are put into practice in ways that marginalise and devalue black students.

Link to Research Article:
https://usir.salford.ac.uk/id/eprint/64217/?template=banner

This will close in 0 seconds

Children’s social workers agile working practice and experiences beyond the office

Dr Dharman Jeyasingham, The British Journal of Social Work, Volume 49, Issue 3, April 2019, Pages 559-576, https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcy077

Abstract

Agile working (flexibility around practitioners’ roles and the location and time of work) is increasingly common across local authority social work in the UK but there is little evidence about the practices it entails, with the small amount of existing research concerned largely with its impact on office environments. This article presents findings from a qualitative exploratory study of eleven social workers’ practices and experiences when engaged in agile working away from office spaces. Data were generated through practitioner diaries, photographs elicited from practitioners and semi-structured interviews, and were analysed using a grounded theory approach. The study found practitioners engaged in agile working in a wide range of domestic, leisure and formal work environments across the public–private continuum. This gave them superficial control over how they worked, in particular the freedom to work in solitude and establish distance between themselves and perceived demands from service users and other practitioners. However, agile working also involved a wider range of material practices and affective experiences for practitioners. These changes provoke questions about data security, increased visibility and unanticipated encounters in public spaces, and the shifting relationship between information-management work and elements of practice involving face-to-face interaction with others.

Link to Research Article: Seeking Solitude and Distance from Others: Children’s Social Workers’ Agile Working Practices and Experiences beyond the Office | The British Journal of Social Work | Oxford Academic (oup.com)

Dr Dharman Jeyasingham of University of Manchester was the lead the ESRC funded project “Becoming agile in local authority children’s safeguarding social work services: examining organisational and individual change in public sector social work”. Details on this project can be found here: GtR (ukri.org)

This will close in 0 seconds

Not Ageing Out of Violence? Older Mens Biographical Narratives of Their Abuse and Violence in Intimate Relationships With Female Partners

Bellamy, C. Struthers, M and Green, L (2023) Cited in Bows, H. (ed) Not Your Usual Suspect: Older Offenders of Violence (Feminist Developments in Violence and Abuse), Emerald Publishing limited, Bingley, pp. 105-119 https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80071-887-620231008
Abstract
Drawing on empirical research which incorporated biographical interviews with two older male perpetrators, this chapter develops theoretical conceptualisations of the histories, experiences and motives of these men. Four key areas are highlighted, which will be subject to closer scrutiny in relation to extant literature: (i) gender, particularly notions of masculinity, power and entitlement; (ii) attitudes relating to the use of violence both within intimate relationships and generally (iii) critical junctures in the life course which triggered attempts to desist; and (iv) an exploration of maturation and completion of treatment programmes in relation to their use of violence, future risks and efforts towards desistance.

Link to Research Article: Not Ageing Out of Violence? Older Men's Biographical Narratives of Their Abuse and Violence in Intimate Relationships With Female Partners | Emerald Insight

This will close in 0 seconds

Exploring health and social care professional initial perceptions of caring for trans patients.

Kirlew MI, Lord H, Weber J (2020) Exploring health and social care professionals’ initial perceptions of caring for trans patients. Nursing Standard. doi: 10.7748/ns.2020.e11383

Link to Research Article Resource: https://journals.rcni.com/nursing-standard/evidence-and-practice/exploring-health-and-social-care-professionals-initial-perceptions-of-caring-for-trans-patients-ns.2020.e11383/abs

This will close in 0 seconds

Coming Soon

This will close in 0 seconds