Úriz Pemán, María Jesús
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Úriz Pemán
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María Jesús
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Sociología y Trabajo Social
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I-COMMUNITAS. Institute for Advanced Social Research
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Publication Open Access Social work beyond the pandemic: exploring social work values for a new eco-social world(SAGE, 2024) Banks, Sarah; Bertotti, Teresa; Cairns, Lynne; Shears, Jane; Shum, Michelle; Sobocan, Ana M.; Strom, Kimberly; Úriz Pemán, María Jesús; Sociología y Trabajo Social; Soziologia eta Gizarte Lana; Institute for Advanced Social Research - ICOMMUNITASThis article draws on a series of international research-focused webinars with social workers in 2022. They were designed to examine the rethinking of professional values during the pandemic in the context of other global crises, particularly the climate emergency. Participants readily shared ethical issues relating to self-care, digital working and reduced bureaucracy during the pandemic and implications for future practice. The need for holistic, community-based approaches integrating social, health and economic aspects of people¿s lives arose, and the importance of seeing humans as part of the natural world (eco-social approaches). Awareness of newer post-anthropocentric and posthuman philosophies was less evident.Publication Open Access Practising ethically during COVID-19: social work challenges and responses(SAGE, 2020) Banks, Sarah; Cai, Tian; Jonge, Ed de; Shears, Jane; Úriz Pemán, María Jesús; Sociología y Trabajo Social; Soziologia eta Gizarte LanaThis article draws on findings of an international study of social workers’ ethical challenges during COVID-19, based on 607 responses to a qualitative survey. Ethical challenges included the following: maintaining trust, privacy, dignity and service user autonomy in remote relationships; allocating limited resources; balancing rights and needs of different parties; deciding whether to break or bend policies in the interests of service users; and handling emotions and ensuring care of self and colleagues. The article considers regional contrasts, the ‘ethical logistics’ of complex decision-making, the impact of societal inequities, and lessons for social workers and professional practice around the globe.Publication Open Access Slow ethics in an age of fast technology: the ethical implications of Industry 4.0 for social work(Routledge, 2025-06-16) Banks, Sarah; Bertotti, Teresa; Forlenza, Daria; Gemara, Netanel; Reimer, Elizabeth; Segal, Michal; Shears, Jane; Sobocan, Ana M.; Strom, Kimberly; Úriz Pemán, María Jesús; Yamaguchi, Mai; Sociología y Trabajo Social; Soziologia eta Gizarte Lana; Institute for Advanced Social Research - ICOMMUNITASThis paper brings together a range of perspectives on the ethicalimplications for social work of the growing use of digital technologies, big data, artificial intelligence and other features of¿Industry 4.0¿ (the fourth industrial revolution). Drawing on contributions to a workshop co-organised by the Ethics and Social Welfare journal, contributors explore: the nature and importance¿slow ethics¿ in an age of fast technological developments; ethical challenges for social work with the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community, which outlaws digital communications; the empowering effect of online meetings for a young person in Italy; and the possibilities and limitations of using algorithms in mental capacity assessments and in ethical decision-making more broadly. Stimulated by these examples, the concluding discussion considers how to maintain a person-centred approach in social work, being pro-active in developing positive uses and resisting the de-humanising and exclusionary impacts of digital technologies.