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List of URLs for Social Work
GENERAL (PART I)

  • Association of Baccalaureate Social Work Program Directors
    This Web site, which serves as a home page for the BSW program directors, offers a variety of links to a wide range of social work Internet resources.

  • Columbia University Social Work Library
    Provides links to social work subject guides and Internet resources, social work related electronic journals on the Internet, and current social work monographs from Columbia University.

  • The Complete Social Worker Guide to Using the Internet "in Social Work
    This online organization strives to create the most comprehensive knowledge base of social work professionals, educators, and students on the Web. They provide an impressive set of links to social work resources in a wide range of practice areas.

  • Computer Use in Social Services Network (CUSSN)
    CUSSNet began in 1985 as a group of FIDONET bulletin boards. Possibly the first social work presence on the Internet, no set of links would be complete without including reference to this site. The site provides links to resources related to computer use in human services, and serves as an important linkage for social workers on the Internet.

  • CTI: Social Work on the Web
    This site is sponsored by the Computers in Teaching Initiative Centre for Human Services at the University of Southampton (UK). The site provides links in the areas of children and families, community work, social work databases, drugs, eldercare, equal opportunities, human rights, mental health, networks, psychosocial palliative care, social work organizations, social work practice, social work research, social work education, welfare benefits, and more.

  • Grassroots Social Science Web Directory
    Sponsored by the Social Work Department of Andrews University, this site offers keyword search capabilities and site reviews. The site also offers links to social work content areas, cross-curriculum issues, and other topics, such as social work education, professional organizations, spirituality and alternative therapies, social work technology, and social work journals and e-zines.

  • INC: Information For and About Nonprofit Organizations
    The Internet Nonprofit Center is a project of The Evergreen State Society of Seattle, Washington. It offers information for and about nonprofit organizations in the United States, and is the home of the Nonprofit FAQ, the Nonprofit Locator, and the Form 990 Project.

  • Social Work Web Resources
    An impressive list of social work related links from the University of Indianapolis. The Webmistress, Shirley Bigna, advises that her list is selective and limited to those sites which library staff, faculty or students have actually reached. Inclusion of a site indicates that the site was visited and found to have useful information. These links are checked on a rotating basis to verify that they are still active.

  • Social Work Access Network
    SWAN, sponsored by the University of South Carolina College of Social Work, offers one of the most complete listing of Internet resources available for social workers. SWAN organizes links in topical areas such as national organizations, global organizations, US governments, schools of social work, conferences and meeting, and topics by subject. SWAN also has listserv and newsgroup directories.

  • Social Work and Social Services Web Sites
    Hosted by the George Warren Brown School of Social Work, this site offers a tremendous number of links in a wide range of social work practice areas.

  • The Social Work Café
    This site represents a wealth of resources in a variety of areas for social workers. Hosted as a free service of GeoCities.Com, the Social Work Café is a community of global Social Work professionals, educators, and students who believe in the cross-global exchange of information.

  • Social Work Search .com
    This site started in early 1996 as Tom Cleereman's Social Work Site. In April, 2001 Linkpopularity.com reported that over 900 different Web sites on the Internet provide links to socialworksearch.com. Now this former tiny personal Web site became a major portal for the online Social Work community in providing Internet related services to social workers and other helping professionals. Socialworksearch.com has now grown to more than 500 different web pages of services and Internet links, offering the largest online database of services devoted solely to the Social Work profession.

  • World Wide Web Resources for Social Workers
    W3RSW, produced by Gary Holden at NYU, is an amazing resource with nearly 55,000 links to social work resources in a wide range of topics. This site was selected for the Chronicle of Higher Education's Information Technology Resources and for the UniGuide Academic Guide to the Internet (formerly the National Science Foundation funded InterNIC Academic Guide to the Internet).

  • Columbia University (New York)
    A particularly well-designed site, Columbia provides a variety of links to library, computing, and Internet resources for social work.

  • Colorado State University
    Colorado State provides a nice set of links to other Web resources.

  • Grant MacEwan Community College (Alberta, Canada)
    Great list of international social work resources, with a focus on Canada.

  • Jane Addams College of Social Work (Illinois)
    This site includes information about Hull House Museum, which commemorates the work of social welfare pioneer and peace advocate Jane Addams, her innovative settlement house associates, and the neighborhood they served.

  • Ohio State University
    This site features information about two journals sponsored by Ohio State College of Social Work, Journal of Poverty and Journal of Social Work Research and Evaluation.

  • New Mexico State University
    Provides information about the Family Preservation Institute and other social work related links.

  • Rochester Institute of Technology (New York)
    This is a nicely designed site that offers resources related to social work and deafness and to social work and information technology.

  • State University of New York at Albany
    Offers information about the research activities of the School of Social Welfare.

  • Syracuse University (New York)
    Offers a comprehensive list of social work links in a wide variety of practice areas.

  • Temple University (Pennsylvania)
    Offers some useful Internet resources for social workers.

  • University of Bristol (UK)
    The School for Policy Studies is the home of the Policy Press, and offers other social work links related to social policy in the United Kingdom.

  • University of Calgary (Alberta, Canada)
    Easy-to-use site offers resources that are useful to students, faculty and staff at the Faculty of Social Work and others in the social work field.

  • University of California at Berkeley
    Berkeley offers a variety of links to social work resources on the Net.

  • University of Central Lancashire (UK)
    Provides access to lots of social work sites including The Social Work Student, Britain's first online, student refereed journal and Social Work Research, a non-critical listing of research reports and academic papers relating to social work.

  • University of Chicago (Illinois)
    This site offers the Advocate's Forum, a social work journal managed entirely by social work students.

  • University of East Anglia, Norwich (UK)
    Provides information about the Centre for Research on the Child and Family and the Family Support Network.

  • University of Kansas
    Provides a bibliography for the strengths perspective in social work, social science resources, information from Office of Social Policy Analysis and the Kansas Kids Count home page.

  • University of Michigan
    Offers important resources for social work students and information about ongoing research at the University of Michigan.

  • University of Oxford (UK)
    Provides information about current research at the University of Oxford, recent publications, and useful links.

  • University of Pennsylvania
    The University of Pennsylvania site provides information about current research efforts of the School of Social Work.

  • University of South Carolina
    The University of South Carolina is the home of the Social Work Access Network (SWAN) and sponsors an annual national Technology Conference for social work.

  • University of South Florida
    Provides a variety of resources for social work students that are useful for seasoned practitioners as well.

  • University of Southern California
    USC offers the Social Science and Humanities Center Social Work Collection, which provides a wealth of links for social work scholars.

  • University of Tennessee--Knoxville
    Provides a social work discussion area, information about the Children's Mental Health Services Research Area, and links to other important resources.

  • University of Texas at Austin
    Provides a listing of the activities of their Center for Social Work Research.

  • University of Texas at Arlington
    The home of CUSSNET (Computer Users in Human Services), UTA offers a variety of informational links for students and practitioners.

  • University of Utah
    The home base of the author, the site provides information about ongoing research projects and related resources, as well as information about the new Technology-Enhanced Doctoral program.

  • University of Washington
    In addition to the usual links, UW offers Policy Watch, a more-or-less weekly bulletin about issues and events in Olympia during the legislative session, focused primarily on social welfare, low-income, and related health concerns before the legislature.

  • University of Wisconsin--Madison
    Offers information about The Institute for Research on Poverty, The LaFollette Institute of Public Policy, and the UW Homelessness Project.

  • University of York (UK)
    This UK site offers a useful Social Policy Resource Guide.

  • Washington University: George Warren Brown "School of Social Work (Missouri)
    One of the most comprehensive sites in social work education, these pages offer information about research projects at GWB and a complete list of informational links in a variety of practice areas. The Social Work and Social Services Jobs Database is a valuable resource for all social workers.

  • Administration for Children and Families
    The Administration on Children, Youth and Families (ACYF) administers the major Federal programs that support: social services that promote the positive growth and development of children and youth and their families; protective services and shelter for children and youth in at-risk situations; child care for working families and families on public assistance; and adoption for children with special needs.

  • Bureau of the Census
    The Census Bureau Web site is designed to enable intuitive use of their Internet offerings, so users need not to be familiar with the Census Bureau's internal organizational structure to effectively locate and use the resources the site has to offer.

  • Bureau of Justice Statistics
    BJS collects, analyzes, publishes, and disseminates information on crime, criminal offenders, victims of crime, and the operation of justice systems at all levels of government.

  • Bureau of Labor Statistics
    The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) is the principal fact-finding agency for the Federal Government in the broad field of labor economics and statistics. The BLS is an independent national statistical agency that collects, processes, analyzes, and disseminates essential statistical data to the American public, the U.S. Congress, other Federal agencies, State and local governments, business, and labor. The BLS also serves as a statistical resource to the Department of Labor.

  • Canadian Government Main Site
    The Government of Canada Site is the Internet electronic access point through which Internet users around the world can obtain information about Canada, its government and its services. Direct links are also provided from this site to government departments and agencies that have Internet facilities.

  • Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
    The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Programs (CFDA) is a government-wide compendium of all 1,381 Federal programs, projects, services, and activities that provide assistance or benefits to the American public. These programs provide grants, loans, loan guarantees, services, information, scholarships, training, insurance, etc.

  • Centers for Disease Control
    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), located in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, is an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services. Its mission is to promote health and quality of life by preventing and controlling disease, injury, and disability. The site provides health news, publications, software, data and statistics, and information about funding and programs.

  • Center for Substance Abuse Prevention
    CSAP's mission is to provide national leadership in the Federal effort to prevent alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drug problems. CSAP fosters the development of comprehensive, culturally appropriate prevention policies and systems that are based on scientifically defensible principles and target both individuals and the environments in which they live.

  • Center for Substance Abuse Treatment
    The Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) was created in October 1992 with the Congressional mandate to expand the availability of effective treatment and recovery services for alcohol and drug problems. CSAT works cooperatively across the private and public treatment spectrum to identify, develop, and support policies, approaches, and programs that enhance and expand treatment services for individuals who abuse alcohol and other drugs and that address individuals' addiction-related problems.

  • Child Support Enforcement
    Child Support Enforcement helps States locate absent parents, establish paternity, and enforce legal orders for support.

  • Corporation for National Service
    This site provides information about volunteer opportunities, including VISTA, AmeriCorps, Senior Corps, Learn and Serve America, and National Service Scholarships.

  • Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS)
    The Department of Health and Human Services is the United States government's principal agency for protecting the health of all Americans and providing essential human services, especially for those who are least able to help themselves. It is the largest grant-making agency in the federal government, providing some 60,000 grants per year. HHS' Medicare program is the nation's largest health insurer, handling more than 800 million claims per year.

  • Federal Emergency Management Agency
    The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is an independent agency of the federal government, reporting to the President. Founded in 1979, FEMA's mission is to reduce loss of life and property and protect our nation's critical infrastructure from all types of hazards through a comprehensive, risk-based, emergency management program of mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery.

  • FedWorld Information Network Home Page
    Access to thousands of U.S. Government Web sites, more than 500,000 U.S. government documents, databases, and other information products.

  • Government Information Sharing Project
    The Government Information Sharing Project was initiated with funding from the U.S. Department of Education and is administered at Oregon State University Libraries. The original goal of the project was to demonstrate improved access to electronic government information, especially for remote users (such as rural Oregon residents) and the general public. Beginning in 1995, the Project developed World Wide Web access to a variety of federal statistical information issued on CD-ROM and distributed through the Federal Depository Library Program. Through the Web, the audience of the site has quickly become a national and international one, including libraries, community developers, small and large businesses, researchers, students, journalists, agencies, and many more.

  • Government Printing Office
    The Government Printing Office (GPO) prints, binds, and distributes the publications of the Congress as well as the executive departments and establishments of the Federal Government. Distribution is being accomplished on an increasing basis via various electronic media in accordance with Public Law 103-40, "The Government Printing Office Electronic Information Access Enhancement Act of 1993."

  • Health Care Financing Administration
    The Health Care Financing Administration (HCFA) provides health insurance for over 74 million Americans through Medicare, Medicaid and State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP). In addition to providing health insurance, HCFA also performs a number of quality-focused activities, including regulation of laboratory testing (CLIA), development of coverage policies, and quality-of-care improvement. HCFA maintains oversight of the survey and certification of nursing homes and continuing care), and makes available to beneficiaries, providers, researchers and State surveyors information about these activities and nursing home quality.

  • Healthfinder®
    Healthfinder® is a gateway consumer health and human services information Web site from the United States government. Healthfinder® can lead you to selected online publications, clearinghouses, databases, Web sites, and support and self-help groups, as well as the government agencies and not-for-profit organizations that produce reliable information for the public. Launched in April 1997, Healthfinder® served Internet users over 1.7 million times in its first year online.

  • Health Resources and Services Administration
    The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) directs national health programs which improve the health of the Nation by assuring quality health care to underserved, vulnerable and special-need populations and by promoting appropriate health professions workforce capacity and practice, particularly in primary care and public health.

  • Hispanic Agenda for Action
    Hispanics are the fastest growing minority population in the U.S. and are predicted to be the largest minority group in the next 15 years. The adverse social conditions suffered by many Hispanics are severely _challenging those institutions and service structures, which struggle to provide and deliver quality services to Hispanic families and communities. HHS is determined to work more closely with its partner institutions and organizations that serve the Hispanic community to better address the needs of the growing Hispanic population, together with other customer groups. As one of many efforts to meet this objective, they have established the Hispanic Agenda for Action (HAA) Home Page to serve as a Departmental Internet link for improving service delivery. The HAA Home Page features services provided by the Department that are of particular interest to the Hispanic community and organizations serving Hispanics. Links to services outside the Department also are featured.

  • House of Representatives
    Contact your congressional representative the easy way.

  • Indian Health Service
    The Indian Health Service (IHS), an agency within the Department of Health and Human Services, is responsible for providing federal health services to American Indians and Alaska Natives. The provision of health services to members of federally-recognized tribes grew out of the special government-to-government relationship between the federal government and Indian tribes.

  • Library of Congress
    The Library of Congress mission is to make its resources available and useful to the Congress and the American people and to sustain and preserve a universal collection of knowledge and creativity for future generations. This World Wide Web site allows the Library of Congress to historical collections, their catalog, the text and images from major exhibitions, the THOMAS database of current and historical information on the U.S. Congress, a Learning Page for K-12 students and teachers, and much more.

  • Maternal and Child Health Bureau
    The Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) is charged with the primary responsibility for promoting and improving the health of our Nation's mothers and children. It predecessor, the Children's Bureau, was established in 1912. In 1935, Congress enacted Title V of the Social Security Act, which authorized the Maternal and Child Health Services Programs--providing a foundation and structure for assuring the health of mothers and children now for more than 60 years. Today, Title V is administered by the Maternal and Child Health Bureau as part of the Health Resources and Services Administration, Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

  • National Association of State Information Resource Executive's StateSearch
    StateSearch is a service of the National Association of State Information Resource Executives and is designed to serve as a topical clearinghouse to state government information on the Internet.

  • National Cancer Institute
    The National Cancer Institute (NCI) is a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), one of eight agencies that compose the Public Health Service (PHS) in the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The NCI, established under the National Cancer Act of 1937, is the Federal Government's principal agency for cancer research and training. The National Cancer Act of 1971 broadened the scope and responsibilities of the NCI and created the National Cancer Program. Over the years, legislative amendments have maintained the NCI authorities and responsibilities and added new information dissemination mandates as well as a requirement to assess the incorporation of state-of-the-art cancer treatments into clinical practice.

  • The National Criminal Justice Reference Service
    The National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS) is one of the most extensive sources of information on criminal and juvenile justice in the world, providing services to an international community of policymakers and professionals. NCJRS is a collection of clearinghouses supporting all bureaus of the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Justice Programs: the National Institute of Justice, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, the Bureau of Justice Statistics, the Bureau of Justice Assistance, the Office for Victims of Crime, and the OJP Program Offices. It also supports the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

  • National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
    In 1970, the United States Congress recognized alcohol abuse and alcoholism as major public health problems and created the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) to combat them. The Web site provides information about reports and publications available from the Institute, as well as access to the ETOH database.

  • National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
    The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development is part of the National Institutes of Health, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The NICHD conducts and supports laboratory, clinical and epidemiological research on the reproductive, neurobiological, developmental, and behavioral processes that determine and maintain the health of children, adults, families and populations.

  • National Institute of Drug Abuse
    The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) supports over 85 percent of the world's research on the health aspects of drug abuse and addiction, ranging from the most fundamental and essential questions about drug abuse; the molecule to managed care, and from DNA to community outreach research. The NIDA Web page is an important part of NIDA's effort to ensure the rapid and effective transfer of scientific data to policy makers, drug abuse practitioners, other health care practitioners and the general public.

  • National Institutes of Health
    The NIH mission is to uncover new knowledge that will lead to better health for everyone. NIH works toward that mission by: conducting research in its own laboratories; supporting the research of non-Federal scientists in universities, medical schools, hospitals, and research institutions throughout the country and abroad; helping in the training of research investigators; and fostering communication of biomedical information.

  • National Institute of Justice
    The National Institute of Justice (NIJ) is the research agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. Created by the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, as amended, NIJ is authorized to support research, evaluation, and demonstration programs, development of technology, and both national and international information dissemination.

  • National Institute of Mental Health
    NIMH is the foremost mental health research organization in the world, with a mission of improving the treatment, diagnosis, and prevention of mental disorders such as schizophrenia and depressive illnesses, and other conditions that affect millions of Americans, including children and adolescents. The Web site provides information about mental health disorders, news and events, grants and contracts, and NIMH-sponsored research activities.

  • National Library of Medicine
    The NLM site provides individuals free access to MEDLINE for free. The visible human project and other offerings make this a "must browse" site.

  • National Institute on Aging
    The National Institute on Aging (NIA)leads a broad scientific effort to understand the nature of aging and to extend the healthy, active years of life. In 1974, Congress granted authority to form the National Institute on Aging to provide leadership in aging research, training, health information dissemination, and other programs relevant to aging and older people. Subsequent amendments to this legislation designated the NIA as the primary federal agency on Alzheimer's disease research.

  • Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
    The OJJDP Web site is designed to provide information and resources on both general areas of interest about juvenile justice and delinquency including conferences, funding opportunities, and new publications and the comprehensive strategy as a framework for communities to combat youth crime.

  • Office of Population Affairs
    The Office of Population Affairs provides resources and policy advice on population, family planning, reproductive health, and adolescent pregnancy issues. OPA also administers two grant programs, the national Family Planning Program and the Adolescent Family Life Program.

  • PREVLINE: Prevention Online
    The National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information, NCADI, is the world's largest repository of information on substance abuse prevention and policy. PREVLINE presents information on drug and alcohol abuse, alcoholism prevention, overdoses, addiction, and treatment through links to thousands of documents, searchable databases, statistics, press releases, public domain graphics, and interactive forums.

  • Rural Empowerment Zones and Enterprise Communities
    The Rural Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Communities Home Page is designed to promote the exchange of information about the Presidential Empowerment Initiative. Here you will find information about the purposes and organization of the Initiative and the Empowerment Zones, Enterprise Communities, and Champion Communities participating in the Initiative. In addition, the REZ/EC Home Page provides a toolbox of information to help communities develop and implement effective strategic plans for community and economic development.

  • Rural Housing Service
    The USDA Rural Housing Service has various programs available to aid in the development of rural America. Rural Housing programs are divided into three categories: Community Facilities (CF), Single Family Housing (SFH), and Multi-Family Housing (MFH). These programs were formerly operated by the Rural Development Administration and the Farmers Home Administration.

  • Senate Home Page
    Contact your Senators the easy way.

  • Social Security Administration
    Social Security Online provides a wealth of information about the Social Security Administration, enabling users to better negotiate the maze of services available.



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