AckermanB. (1980). Social justice and the liberal state.New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
2.
Aristotle. (1980). The nicomachean ethics, translated by D. Ross, revised by J. L. Ackrill and J. O. Urmson. New York: Oxford University Press.
3.
BarryB. M. (1989). A treatise on social justice.Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
4.
BeckE. L., & EichlerM. (2000). Consensus organizing: A practice model for community building. Journal of Community Practice8(1), 87–103.
5.
BerlinI. (1978). Concepts and categories.London: Hogarth Press.
6.
BerlinI. (1996). Karl Marx: His life and environment (4th ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
7.
BerlinI. (1958). Two concepts of liberty.Oxford: Clarendon Press.
8.
BeverlyD., & McSweenyE. (1987). Social welfare and social justice.Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
9.
BirdO. A. (1967). The idea of justice.New York: Praeger.
10.
BrawleyE. A., & Martinez-BrawleyE. E. (1999, June). Promoting social justice in partnership with the mass media, Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 26(2), 63–86.
11.
BrillC. K. (2001, March). Looking at the social work profession through the eyes of the NASW Code of Ethics. Research on Social Work Practice, 11(2), 223–234.
12.
CampbellT. (1989). Seven Theories of Human Society.Oxford: Clarendon Press.
13.
CaputoR. (2000). Multiculturalism and social justice in the United States: An attempt to reconcile the irreconcilable within a pragmatic liberal framework. Race, Gender, and Class, 7(4), 161–182.
14.
CarsonM. J. (1990). Settlement folk: Social thought and the American settlement movement, 1885–1930.Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
15.
ClowardR. (1990). Foreword. In EpsteinI. & Cherrey-ReeserL., Professionalization and activism in social work: The sixties, the eighties, and the future.New York: Columbia University Press.
16.
Council on Social Work Education. (2001). Curriculum policy statement–revised.Alexandria, VA: Author.
17.
CoxA. L. (2001). BSW students favor strengths/empowerment-based generalist practice. Families in Society, 82(3), 305–313.
18.
DanielsD. (1989). Always a sister: The feminism of Lillian D. Wald.New York: Feminist Press at the City University of New York.
19.
DavisA. F. (1967). Spearheads for reform: The social settlements and the progressive movement, 1890–1917.New York: Oxford University Press.
20.
DeanR. G., & RhodesM. L. (1998). Social constructionism and ethics: What makes a “better” story. Families in Society, 79(3), 254–262.
21.
ElshtainJ. B. (2002). Jane Addams and the dream of American democracy: A life.New York: Basic Books.
22.
EtzioniA. (1993). The spirit of community.New York: Crown Books.
23.
Figueira-McDonoughJ. (1993). Policy practice: The neglected side of social work intervention. Social Work, 38(2), 179–188.
24.
FisherR. (1994). Let the people decide: Neighborhood organizing in America (revised ed.). New York: Twayne.
25.
FisherR., & KargerH. J. (1997). Social work and community in a private world: Getting out in public.White Plains, NY: Longman.
26.
FranklinJ. (Ed.). (1998). Social policy and social justice: The IPPR reader, Malden, MA: Polity Press.
27.
FraserN. (1995). From redistribution to recognition? Dilemmas of justice in a “post-socialist” age. New Left Review, 212, 68–93.
28.
FreireP. (1971). Pedogogy of the oppressed.New York: Seabury Press.
29.
GalJ. (2001, June). The perils of compensation in social welfare policy. Social Service Review, 75(2), 225–244.
30.
GayP. (1966). The enlightenment, 2 vols., New York: Alfred Knopf.
31.
GeorgeV., & WildingP. (1994). Welfare and ideology, London: Routledge.
32.
GibelmanM. (2000). Affirmative action at the crossroads: A social justice perspective. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 27(1), 153–174.
33.
GilD. (1998). Confronting injustice and oppression: Concepts and strategies for social workers, New York: Columbia University Press.
34.
GilD., & GilE. A. (1985). Toward social and economic justice.Cambridge, MA: Schenkman.
35.
GilbertN. (1989). The enabling state: Modern welfare capitalism in America.New York: Oxford University Press.
36.
GilbertN. (1995). Welfare justice: Restoring social equity.New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
37.
GottschalkS. S., & WitkinS. L. (1991). Rationality in social work: A critical examination. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 18(4), 121–135.
38.
GouldK. H. (2000). Beyond Jones v. Clinton: Sexual harassment law and social work. Social Work, 45(3), 237–248.
39.
GouletD. (1971). The cruel choice.New York: Pantheon.
40.
GreenJ. (1999). Cultural awareness in the human services (3rd ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
41.
GroganC. (2000, December). Principles of social justice, Social Service Review.74(4), 668–671.
42.
GutierrezL., ParsonR. J., & CoxE. O. (Eds.) (1998). Empowerment and social work practice: A sourcebook.Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole.
43.
GutierrezL., & LewisE. A. (Eds.). (1999). Empowerment and women of color.New York: Columbia University Press.
44.
HagenJ. L. (2000). Critical perspectives on social welfare: Challenges and controversies. Families in Society, 81(6), 555–556.
45.
HayekF. A. (1976). The mirage of social justice.Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
46.
HaynesD. T., & WhiteB.W. (1999). Commentary: Will the “real” social work please stand up? A call to stand for professional unity. Social Work, 44(4), 385–391.
47.
HeldV. (1995). Justice and care: Essential readings in feminist ethics.Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
48.
HeldV. (1984). Rights and goods: Justifying social action.New York: The Free Press.
49.
HobbesT. (Ed.) (1996). Leviathan, New York: Oxford University Press.
50.
HolderA. C. (1922). The settlement idea: A vision of social justice.New York: MacMillan.
51.
HydeC. (1998). A model for diversity training in human service agencies. Administration in Social Work, 22(4), 19–33.
52.
IglehartA., & BecerraR. (1995). Social services and the ethnic community.Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
53.
IsbisterJ. (2001). Capitalism and justice: Envisioning social and economic fairness.Bloomfield, CT: Kumarian Press.
54.
IsraelJ. I. (2001). Radical enlightenment: Philosophy and the making of modernity, 1650–1750.New York: Oxford University Press.
55.
KatzM. B. (2001). The price of citizenship: Redefining the American welfare state.New York: Metropolitan Books.
LeeJ. A. B. (1994). The empowerment approach to social work practice.New York: Columbia University Press.
58.
LeonardP. (1995). Postmodernism, socialism and social welfare. Journal of Progressive Human Services, 6(2), 3–19.
59.
LewisH. (1987). A family ethic for our time. Social Casework, 68(2), 311–314.
60.
MacleodA. M. (1985). Economic inequality: Justice and incentives. In KipnisK., & MeyersD. T. (Eds.), Economic Justice (pp. 176–189). Totowa, NJ: Rowman & Allenheld.
61.
MaguireD. (1980). A new American justice: Ending the white male monopolies.Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
62.
MarxK. (1964). In StruikD. J. (Ed.) (M. Milligan, Trans.), Economic and philosophic manuscripts of 1844.New York: International Publishers.
63.
McNuttJ. (1997, December). New communitarian thought and the future of social policy. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 24(4), 45–56.
64.
MeadL. (1986). Beyond entitlement: The social obligations of citizenship.New York: The Free Press.
65.
MeadL. (1997). The new paternalism: Supervisory approaches to poverty.Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution.
66.
MillJ. S. (1971). Utilitarianism.Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill.
67.
MillerD. (2001). Boundaries and justice: Diverse ethical perspectives.Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
68.
MillerD. (1999). Principles of social justice.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
69.
MillerD. (1976). Social justice.Oxford: Clarendon Press.
70.
MoonJ. D. (Ed.). (1988). Responsibility, rights, and welfare: The theory of the welfare state.Boulder, CO: Westview.
71.
MorellC. (1996). Radicalizing recovery: Addiction, spirituality, and politics. Social Work, 41(3), 306–312.
72.
MoroneyR. (1986). Shared responsibility: Families and social policy.New York: Aldine.
73.
MullalyR. (1997). Structural social work: Ideology, theory, and practice (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.
74.
National Association of Social Workers. (1996). Code of ethics (Rev. ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
75.
NozickR. (1974). Anarchy, state, and utopia.New York: Basic Books.
76.
NussbaumM. C. (1999). Sex and social justice.New York: Oxford University Press.
77.
Plato. (1974). The republic (G. M. A. Grube, Trans.). Indianapolis, IN: Hackett.
78.
PrigoffA. (2000). Economics for social workers: Social outcomes of economic globalization, with strategies for community action.Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole/Thomson.
79.
RawlsJ. (1971, 1999). A theory of justice.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
80.
RawlsJ. (2001). Justice as fairness: A restatement.Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
81.
ReamerF. G. (1998). The evolution of social work ethics, Social Work, 43(6), 488–499.
82.
ReischM., & AndrewsJ. L. (2001). The road not taken: A history of radical social work in the United States.New York: Brunner-Routledge.
83.
ReynoldsB. C. (1963). An uncharted journey: Fifty years growth in social work.New York: Citadel Press.
84.
ReynoldsB. C. (1951). Social work and social living, New York: Citadel Press.
85.
RiveraF., & EhrlichJ. (1998). Community organizing in a diverse society (3rd ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
86.
RobinsonR. (2000). The debt: What America owes to Blacks, New York: Dutton.
87.
RoemerJ. E. (1996). Theories of distributive justice, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
88.
RoseS. M. (2000). Reflections on empowerment-based practice. Social Work, 45(5), 403–412.
89.
RousseauJ.-J. (1994). Discourse on the origins of inequality (ColemanP., Ed.; F. Philip, Trans.). New York: Oxford University Press. (Original work published 1754.)
90.
RyanW. (1981). Equality.New York: Vintage Books.
91.
de Saint-JustA. L. L. (1968). Oeuvres choisies, discours, rapports, institutions republicaines, proclamations, lettres, Paris: Gallimard. (Original work published earlier.)
92.
SaleebeyD. (1990). Philosophical disputes in social work: Social justice denied. Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare, 17(1), 29–40.
93.
SaleebeyD. (2002). The strengths perspective in social work practice (3rd ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
94.
SandelM. (1982). Liberalism and the limits of justice, New York: Cambridge University Press.
95.
SchmidtzD., & GoodinR. E. (1998). Social welfare and individual responsibility, New York: Cambridge University Press.
96.
SchreiberM. S. (1995). Labeling a social worker a national security risk: A memoir. Social Work, 40(5), 656–660.
97.
SenA. (1990, June 14). Individual freedom as a social commitment. New York Review of Books, 49–54.
98.
SenA. (1992). Inequality re-examined.New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
99.
SimonB. L. (1994). The empowerment tradition in social work practice.New York: Columbia University Press.
100.
SklarK. K. (1995). Florence Kelley and the nation's work: The rise of women's political culture 1830–1900.New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
101.
SklarK. K. (1998). Social justice feminists in the U.S. and Germany: A dialogue in documents 1885–1933.Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
102.
SolomonB. B. (1976). Black empowerment: Social work in oppressed communities.New York: Columbia University Press.
103.
SternbachJ. (2000). Lessons learned about working with men: A prison memoir. Social Work, 45(5), 413–423.
104.
SunsteinC. R. (1997). Free markets and social justice.New York: Oxford University Press.
105.
SwensonC. R. (1998). Clinical social work's contribution to a social justice perspective. Social Work, 43(6), 527–537.
106.
TitmussR. (1968). Commitment to welfare.London: George Allen & Unwin.
107.
TomasiJ. (2001). Liberalism beyond justice: Citizens, society, and the boundaries of political theory.Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
108.
TowleC. (1945). Common human needs.Washington, DC: Social Security Administration.
109.
TuckerW. J. (1903). The progress of the social conscience (Reprint from The Atlantic Monthly, 116 (3), 289–303). Boston: South End House Association.
110.
U.S. Catholic Bishops. (1986). Economic justice for all: Pastoral letter on Catholic social teaching and the U.S. economy.Washington, DC: National Conference of Catholic Bishops.
111.
van MillD. (2001). Liberty, rationality and agency in Hobbes'sLeviathan. Albany: State University of New York Press.
112.
Van SoestD. (1994). Strange bedfellows: A call for reordering national priorities from three social justice perspectives. Social Work, 39(6), 710–717.
113.
VerscheldenC. (1993). Social work values and pacifism: Opposition to war as a professional responsibility. Social Work, 38(6), 765–769.
114.
WakefieldJ. C. (1988). Psychotherapy, distributive justice, and social work—Part 1: Distributive justice as a conceptual framework for social work. Social Service Review, 62(2), 187–210.
115.
WakefieldJ.C. (1988). Psychotherapy, distributive justice, and social work—Part 2: Psychotherapy and the pursuit of justice, Social Service Review62(3), 353–382.
116.
WarrenR. (1983). New perspectives on the American community (4th ed.). Homewood, IL: Dorsey Press.
117.
WeickA. (1999). Guilty knowledge, Families in Society, 80(4), 327–332.
118.
WhiteJ. E. (2000). Democracy, justice, and the welfare state: Reconstructing public care, University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press.
119.
WiseS. S. (1909). The conference sermon: Charity vs. justice. Proceedings of the National Conference of Charities and Corrections (USA), 36, 20–29.
120.
WithornA. (1986). What is progressive social work?The Bertha Capen Reynolds Society Newsletter, 1(2), 1–2.
121.
WitkinS. (1999). Identities and contexts. Social Work, 44(4), 293–297.
122.
WitkinS. (1998). Is social work an adjective?Social Work, 43(6), 483–486.
123.
WitkinS. (2000). Writing social work. Social Work, 45(5), 389–394.
124.
WoodsR. (1905). Social work: A new profession. International Journal of Social Ethics, 16.
125.
ReischM., & AndrewsJ. (2001). The road not taken: A history of radical social work in the United States.New York: Brunner-Routledge.
126.
ReischM., & GambrillE. (Eds.) (1997). Social work in the 21st century.Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.