The year 1933 marked the official birth of the career with the founding of the first social work school, the Escuela de Enseñanza Doméstica . During the Cardenismo era
Moving past technical assistance toward critical, scientific action. The year 1933 marked the official birth of
Evangelista argues that social workers often suffer from a "blurring" of their professional identity because they are frequently viewed as mere administrators of institutional policy. He proposes a shift toward , where the professional prioritizes social commitment over the individualistic "metanarratives" of traditional modernity. Legacy and Continued Study He proposes a shift toward , where the
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As Mexico moved toward secularization, social aid began to shift from the church to the state. This era saw the rise of more organized public assistance, culminating in the social upheaval of the , which highlighted the desperate need for institutionalized responses to poverty and inequality. 3. The Emergence of the Profession (1920–1933) and policy advocacy)
Historia del trabajo social en México - Elí Evangelista Ramírez
The is more than a book title—it is a scholarly anchor. In an era of fleeting digital information, this fixed edition offers reliability. For any student or professional seeking to understand why Mexican social work looks the way it does today (with its blend of community organizing, clinical casework, and policy advocacy), Eli Evangelista Ramírez’s work remains the definitive starting point.