Social Work

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Social work is a professional discipline of broader context of promoting social values, justice, human right, diversity, empowerment and liberation of the people (Jonathan 2016). The international Federal of Social Workers (IFSW 2014) defined social work as a practice based and academic profession that espouses social change and development, social cohesion, empowerment and liberation of the people. More so, social work as a profession and discipline requires exploitation of principles of social justice, human rights, collective responsibility and respect for diversities as they are integral components of social work (IFSW 2014). Without attenuating the complexity of social work, it is an academic discipline with broader components that a pertinent to human beings and human right serves as base for social work profession as argued by Jonathan Dickens 2016 who also asserts that ‘’If need is the traditional of social policy, rights are its new blood’’. Human rights are the basic rights and freedom of humans irrespective of their ethnic background, religious view, sex, and political orientation as defined by the Liberty Human Rights Organization (2018) The Liberty human right organization UK (2018) confirmed that the United Kingdom has a long history of human right protection which can …show more content…

The United Nations (1948) defined human rights by classifying the rights of humans into thirty-five domains. These include; Equality right (All human is born free and equal to dignity and right), rights to freedoms without discrimination such as race, sex, religion et al., Right to life, liberty and security, right not be held in slavery, right not to be subject to torture or inhuman treatment, right to equality fear and equal public hearing and equality before the law among

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