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To say that it is only disadvantaged groups’ benefit from Social Policy is flawed. Everyone who belongs to a Society, state or community will encounter Social Policy. ...
It can be argued that Social Policy is about the arrangements of everyday life. I can identify this by contesting that when a worker is stuck in a traffic jam on the way home form work, or when a parent cannot get paid work because there is no childcare facilities available, she or he is experiencing Social Policy or the lack or in action. ...
Another example of Social Policy enacting on everyday life is the matter if immigration and the family policy. A couple may be trying to bring their parents to Australia using the policy, but find that the waiting lists are so long, that they may well wonder, if their parents will ever join them due to the lengthy delays.
Problems of everyday life may been seen as ‘personal problems’, yet it is these everyday problems, that are incurred by all individuals, from all cultural, social, and linguistic backgrounds, that are the substance of Social Policy, this is the way that society is organised, who gets what benefits and who is left to fend for themselves.
Social Policy has many definitions and can be applied differently throughout our society. ... Social Policy is for every changing an evolving as it is directed and moulded with the changing political climate and the every changing needs and wants of its society.
Even though there are many different definitions and approaches of Social Policy, there is always a common element of human experiences, needs or problems which through working with those around them or in their wider community, drawing on their skills they work toward creating or changing Social Policy.
Approximate Word count = 1273 Approximate Pages = 5.1 (250 words per page double spaced)
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