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10.1 Affilia 177/0886109905274614 Summer 2005 Dinerman EDITORIAL The format for editorials is traditionally the voice, the opinion of the editor, or sometimes that of the Editorial Board. This is a useful function, and I, as editor, have enjoyed sounding off about things that I believed to be of con- cern, of interest, to feminist social workers. In this editorial, however, I am issuing a invitation to all readers to sound off, to have their say and to have other readers read and react to what they are saying. There are so many ways to do so and so many columns in which such a piece may appear in Affilia. So, please heed this call. For example, we have a column called Women Creating Change. The sub- missions to this column consist of interviews with women, all social work- ers, who have caused change to occur by virtue of unusual roles they have played, unusual tasks they have carried out, or unusual events they have made happen. Some have acted on the international scene, some on the city government scene, and some in a small village in the United States or a far- off country. But in every case, a
Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work – SAGE
Published: May 1, 2005
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