Managerial supervisors are those persons who supervise direct service staff, who oversee human service programs, and who perform macro practice tasks in their agencies on a daily basis. They are not clinical supervisors who oversee the treatment aspects of direct practice, nor are they administrators at the executive level.Managing Human Resources in the Human Servicesis the first book to address the challenges facing the often under-appreciated managerial supervisors who oversee and provide a crucial organizational structure for work that occurs in human service across the country. According to authors Perlmutter, Bailey, and Netting the successful managerial supervisor must be able to create and develop the organizational culture in which client-centered practice can occur, balance the demands of administrative leadership with those of workers who see clients, keep a client-centered focus amid the paradoxes that arise in the process, and maintain a healthy professional presence.Managing Human Resources in the Human Serviceprovides valuable guidance to students of administration and to practitioners on the many difficult issues that arise for the managerial supervisor. Special Features ? Identifies the paradoxical nature of today's human service environment ? Provides practical, readable chapters with immediate applications ? Focuses on how to be an effective supervisor and encourages independent thinking ? Includes an extensive reference list for additional reading ? Written by authors with years of experience in multiple settings
Foreword, John Tropman Preface Acknowledgments Part One. The Changing Context 1. Professional Challenges for Managerial Supervisors 2. Responding to Legal Mandates, coauthored by Karen Cherwony 3. Building Strategic Alliances 4. Humanizing Technology Part Two. Organizational Adaptive Strategies 5. Facilitating Communication 6l‡