Ramirez Ed Plaza Y Valdes Mexico 2001 Fixed [new] | Historia Del Trabajo Social Eli Evangelista
In the vast landscape of social work literature, few works manage to bridge the gap between a local, national narrative and the broader Latin American context as effectively as the 2001 publication Historia del Trabajo Social by Eli Evangelista Ramírez. Published by the prestigious Mexico City-based editorial house , this book remains a cornerstone text for students, historians, and practitioners of social work in the Spanish-speaking world. Two decades after its release, its utility as a "fixed" (in the sense of established and reliable) history is unquestionable.
While global histories (such as those by James Leiby in the US or Joachim Wieler in Germany) focus on the Industrial Revolution and the Settlement House movement, Evangelista Ramírez offers a distinctly Mexican perspective. She addresses: In the vast landscape of social work literature,
Following the Mexican Revolution, the first concrete steps toward professionalization emerged. In While global histories (such as those by James