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Dr. Rosemary Kennedy Chapin is an award-winning teacher and researcher possessing extensive program development experience in the social policy arena. After receiving her PhD, she worked as a research/policy analyst for the Minnesota Department of Human Services, where she was involved in crafting numerous long-term care reform initiatives. In 1989, she joined the faculty at the University of Kansas, where she established the Center for Research on Aging and Disability Options (CRADO). CRADO's mission is improving social service practice and policy for older adults and people with disabilities, particularly those with low incomes. She retired from the University of Kansas in 2018. A prolific author, she is renowned for her work on the strengths perspective, home-based and community-based supports and services, and social policy. In 1995, she reformulated strengths principles to guide policy practice in an article published in the journal Social Work. This textbook grew out of that foundational strengths policy practice scholarship. Many of her other research publications have helped shape Medicaid long-term care policy reform. She has been recognized by many groups at both the state and federal levels for her years of cutting-edge research and advocacy. In 2016, the National Association of Social Workers (NASW) chose her to join the ranks of pioneers in social work honored by the profession. If you would like to learn more about the work of past and present leaders in the field, including Dr. Chapin, search the web for "NASW Social Work Pioneers." She has also been singled out for her pioneering policy practice work by the national organization Influencing Social Policy. She and her husband have three children and live in Lawrence, Kansas. Melinda Lewis is Associate Professor of Practice in the School of Social Welfare at the University of Kansas and Associate Director of the School's Center for Community Engagement and Collaboration. The instructors' materials for this text were informed by her teaching of foundation and advanced-level master's in social work social policy and policy practice courses, and she also has years of experiencing advising students and field agencies on policy analysis and policy practice. Before joining the university faculty, she spent more than a decade consulting to nonprofit organizations in fields such as safety-net health care, violence prevention, community economic development, immigrant rights, child welfare, and early childhood education. From 2012 to 2018, she was the Assistant Director of the Center on Assets, Education, and Inclusion, based at the University of Michigan. She co-authored three books examining various aspects of the relationship between wealth inequality and children's educational outcomes. |