This article engages with literature on the neoliberalisation of social work but advances the debate by building an argument based on interviews with social work graduates that reveal the perceived changes to the profession over the last 50 years. Based on lived experiences, we show that social work as a profession has experienced significant changes that have occurred both internally and externally to the profession. These changes form part of a larger ideological shift towards neoliberalism. Beginning with the Thatcher administration, intensifying under New Labour’s Third Way and persisting under the Age of Austerity of Prime Ministers Cameron and May, the neoliberalisation of social work has sought to turn it into an outcome-oriented, in...
This article critically examines the impact of the neoliberal university upon social work education ...
Arguments about the colonial and imperialist character of international social work initially emerge...
Starting from the observation that social work students and faculty conceive of social work as an ar...
Drawing on a neo-Gramscian portrayal of hegemony as a contested process, this research explores the ...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities, subj...
It is argued in this article that since the 1980s there has been a paradigm shift away from social w...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities,subje...
The world in which social work operates today is a very different world from that in which most of u...
This thesis explores the impact of neoliberalism on the political identity of social workers. It dis...
The South African social work profession, which can be considered to still be in the early stages of...
While social welfare policy forms a cornerstone of the social work profession, economic policy and i...
This article considers the changing nature of social work in England and Sweden in the context of ne...
This article considers the changing nature of social work in England and Sweden in the context of ne...
A commentary on previously published work submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the...
This article is based on a study of the experiences of social workers employed in a public service o...
This article critically examines the impact of the neoliberal university upon social work education ...
Arguments about the colonial and imperialist character of international social work initially emerge...
Starting from the observation that social work students and faculty conceive of social work as an ar...
Drawing on a neo-Gramscian portrayal of hegemony as a contested process, this research explores the ...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities, subj...
It is argued in this article that since the 1980s there has been a paradigm shift away from social w...
Neoliberalism reduces everything, including social work practice and education, to commodities,subje...
The world in which social work operates today is a very different world from that in which most of u...
This thesis explores the impact of neoliberalism on the political identity of social workers. It dis...
The South African social work profession, which can be considered to still be in the early stages of...
While social welfare policy forms a cornerstone of the social work profession, economic policy and i...
This article considers the changing nature of social work in England and Sweden in the context of ne...
This article considers the changing nature of social work in England and Sweden in the context of ne...
A commentary on previously published work submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the...
This article is based on a study of the experiences of social workers employed in a public service o...
This article critically examines the impact of the neoliberal university upon social work education ...
Arguments about the colonial and imperialist character of international social work initially emerge...
Starting from the observation that social work students and faculty conceive of social work as an ar...