Ingrid Mielenz

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Ingrid Mielenz (born September 13, 1945 in Berlin ) is a German social politician ( SPD ) with a focus on social work. I. Mielenz introduced the term “meddling strategy” in social work in the early 1980s, which in 1990 was given legal status in Section 1, Paragraph 3, No. 4 of Book VIII of the Social Code.

Life and work

Ingrid Mielenz grew up in Berlin. After graduating from high school (1966), she studied sociology , economics , business administration and labor law at the Free University of Berlin and graduated with a degree in sociology. From 1972 to 1974 she was a government trainee in Berlin and passed her state examination. She then worked in the planning group of the Senate Department for Family, Youth and Sport in Berlin until 1986, which she also headed from 1977. Her main areas of work were day-care center planning, vocational training, housing and urban redevelopment as areas of responsibility for child and youth welfare.

From 1987 to 2004 she was professional city councilor for youth, family and social affairs in the city of Nuremberg (“social officer”). During this time she was a board member of the Working Group for Youth Welfare (AGJ) and a member of the board of trustees of the German Youth Institute (DJI) in Munich, from 1999 to 2004 also its chairman, and from 1999 to 2005 chairwoman of the Federal Youth Board of Trustees .

Until 2012 she was chairwoman of the Association for the Promotion of Vocational and Cultural Education for Young People and Young Adults (BBJ eV Berlin) and the supervisory board of BBJ Consult AG Berlin. Since then various voluntary activities, including a. at senior magazine six & sixty and on the board of trustees of IB Bayern.

Ingrid Mielenz is married to Dieter Kreft .

Memberships and honors

Fonts

  • (Ed., With Dieter Kreft ) Dictionary of social work. Tasks, fields of practice, terms and methods of social work and social education. Beltz, Weinheim / Basel 1980; 8th, completely revised and updated edition 2017.
  • Youth welfare planning: With what goals, for whom, with whom, how, what, where? In: Theory and Practice of Social Work. 10/1980, p. 363 ff.
  • The strategy of interference. Social work between social communal politics and self-help. In: S. Müller / T. Olk / H.-U. Otto (ed.): Social work as social local politics. Approaches to actively shaping local living conditions. neue praxis, special issue 6/1981, p. 57 ff.
  • Tasks of youth welfare in the event of youth unemployment and job difficulties of young people. Hermine Albers Prize of the AGJ 1984, Bonn 1985.
  • The self-help concept in youth welfare. In: AGJ / DJI (ed.): Secure a chance for youth. Münster 1991, p. 243 ff.
  • Employment programs against poverty. In: J. Münder / E. Jordan (ed.): Courage to change. Festschrift for Dieter Kreft's 60th birthday. Münster 1996, p. 253 ff.
  • Cross-cutting policy and meddling strategy. In: Blätter der Wohlfahrtspflege 10/1997, pp. 208 ff.
  • with Richard Münchmeier: Youth social work as an interference strategy. In: P. Fühlbier / R. Münchmeier (ed.): Handbook of Youth Social Work Vol. 1, pp. 408 ff.
  • with Dieter Kreft: Looking back on 60 years of child and youth welfare - from youth to child support. In: Working Group for Child and Youth Welfare / AGJ (Ed.): Transitions - Child and Youth Welfare in Germany. Presented on the occasion of 60 years of AGJ. Berlin 2009, pp. 22-38.

literature

  • Ullrich Gintzel: meddling strategy. In: Short dictionary youth welfare and social work. Stuttgart u. a. O. 2001, p. 132 ff.
  • Ewald Schürmann: Get involved, network, enforce. In: socialmanagement 5/2002, p. 8 ff.
  • E. Jürgen Krauss: Interference. An element of community work strategies. In: S. Odierna / U. Berendt (Ed.): Community work. Lines of development and fields of action. Neu-Ulm 2004, p. 67 ff.
  • Richard Münchmeier: Meddling Strategy . In: Kreft / Mielenz (Ed.): Dictionary of social work. 8th edition Weinheim and Basel 2017, p. 244 ff.
  • Georg Hopfengärtner (ed.): Sigena and Ingrid. 18 years of municipal social policy powered by Ingrid Mielenz. Nuremberg 2005.

Individual evidence

  1. Nürnberger Nachrichten online, requested on August 5, 2011 [1]