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The list of people who accompanied me during the development of the Poverty-Aware Paradigm (PAP) is too long to include here. It includes service users, activists, social workers, policymakers, students, colleagues and members of human rights organisations. I am deeply grateful to all of you. In particular, I thank the social work students and supervisors who participated in the programme Casework for Social Change and the social workers who participated in the PAP courses initiated by the Ministry of Welfare and Social Services for sharing with me so many anecdotes from their practices, many of which found their way into this book. Thank you for teaching me and learning with me.
The Ministry of Welfare and Social Services, with the collaboration of the National Insurance Institute, JDC-Ashalim and the Rashi Foundation, led the development of the PAP programmes and the implementation of the PAP in social services departments on a national scale from 2014. Part of this process consisted of implementing a project aimed at developing digital materials on the PAP. Chapter 5, ‘Frequently asked questions on poverty and poverty-aware social work’, was originally written with the Center for Educational Technology as part of this project. I also thank Sivan Russo-Carmel and Iris Socolover-Yaacobi for their contribution to the writing of the Hebrew version of Chapter 10, ‘What is active in the active exercising of rights’, which appeared in the journal Social Security in 2019. Many thanks also to Ruth Buzaglo, Rina Bartz, Shlomi Michael ben Hamo, Adam Cohen, Idit Zamir-Yaffe and Sivan Russo-Carmel for approving the publication of the panel discussion in Chapter 13, ‘In the face of social injustice – a panel’. I also thank Semadar and Nurit (pseudonyms) who gave me permission to publish their stories of practice. Finally, I thank Lindsay Talmud for his careful editing and Nur Shimei, Yuval Saar-Heiman, Shachar Timor-Shlevin, Eynat Vager-Atias and Sivan Russo-Carmel for their ongoing comradeship. I appreciate it very much.
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