Decolonizing Social Work: From Theory to Transformative Practice
By (Author) Tanja Kleibl
Edited by Robel Afeworki Abay
Edited by Anna-Lisa Klages
Edited by Sara Rodrguez Lugo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
5th September 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Colonialism and imperialism
Human rights, civil rights
361.3
Hardback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This edited collection provides a long-overdue examination of a practice that is continuously involved in managing, regulating, and subordinating individuals and communities. While it is well established that neoliberal systems of population management are designed to target the constructed other, there is considerably less research examining how social work in particular interacts with the vestiges of colonialism to further this practice. Gathering social work scholars and practitioners from around the world, this collection offers a geographically diverse array of ambitious and insightful theoretical, conceptual, and practical discussions of how social work can perpetuate the afterlives of colonialism and of how this can be reversed. In so doing, this book not only provides in-depth, empirically grounded critiques of and antidotes to various policies for managing people at the margins of society, it also makes a compelling case for always keeping the complexity of colonial continuity in conversation with neoliberal systems of governance. As these chapters show, it is only by keeping the full complexity of such confluences in mind that social inequality and institutional racism can be understood and that possibilities for change can emerge. For its fundamental contributions to the literature on postcolonial social work, this is essential reading for social work researchers and postgraduates; and for its plainspoken tone and practical recommendations, it is a go-to source for social work practitioners eager to align their own everyday work with the demands of global justice.
Tanja Kleibl is Professor for Social Work, Migration and Diversity at Technical University of Applied Sciences Wrzburg-Schweinfurt, Germany. She is also the author of Decolonizing Civil Society in Mozambique (Zed Books, 2021). Robel Afeworki Abay is a PhD fellow at Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany. Anna-Lisa Klages is a Research Associate and PhD fellow at BayWISS Academic Forum Social Change in affiliation with LMU Munich, Technical University of Applied Sciences Wrzburg-Schweinfurt, Germany. Sara Rodrguez Lugo is a student assistant, Technical University of Applied Sciences Wrzburg-Schweinfurt, Germany.