Applying Foucault’s concepts of disciplinary power and technologies of the self to the ex-periences of social work academics in English universities, this articles reveals their carceral existences, arguing that social work academics and their students exist within a “carceral network” which controls and normalises behaviour by simultaneously trapping them with-in and excluding them from succeeding in academic practices. While social work academics become “docile bodies” as they are shaped and trained by competing norms of neoliberal higher education and professional social practice, their position as insiders and outsiders to both can also enable them to resist certain disciplinary expectations. The findings of the qualitative study discus...
Taking the development of social work education in the UK as an example of some of the ways in which...
There can be little doubt that neoliberalism has replaced social democracy as the political consensu...
This paper explores the suggestion that younger students and social workers are more accepting of ne...
Applying Foucault’s concepts of disciplinary power and technologies of the self to the ex-periences ...
Using Foucault’s (1989) concept of subject positions, this doctoral research, explores and discusse...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.A ...
Incivility within social work education reflects patterns seen across higher education and within so...
Students entering university-based social work qualifying education are increasingly constructed in ...
What are the everyday practices of academic work in social science? How do social scientists learn t...
• Summary: This article explores relations of power in social work using insights drawn from the cri...
The Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) will soon revise the social work education continuum by ...
In an increasingly complex, globalized world, many of the problems confronting social workers are ro...
Social work has always been a contested activity and its status as an academic discipline remains un...
It has been suggested that the emerging generation of social workers tend to be motivated primarily ...
A critically reflexive approach to social work practice entails an understanding of power. However, ...
Taking the development of social work education in the UK as an example of some of the ways in which...
There can be little doubt that neoliberalism has replaced social democracy as the political consensu...
This paper explores the suggestion that younger students and social workers are more accepting of ne...
Applying Foucault’s concepts of disciplinary power and technologies of the self to the ex-periences ...
Using Foucault’s (1989) concept of subject positions, this doctoral research, explores and discusse...
This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.A ...
Incivility within social work education reflects patterns seen across higher education and within so...
Students entering university-based social work qualifying education are increasingly constructed in ...
What are the everyday practices of academic work in social science? How do social scientists learn t...
• Summary: This article explores relations of power in social work using insights drawn from the cri...
The Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) will soon revise the social work education continuum by ...
In an increasingly complex, globalized world, many of the problems confronting social workers are ro...
Social work has always been a contested activity and its status as an academic discipline remains un...
It has been suggested that the emerging generation of social workers tend to be motivated primarily ...
A critically reflexive approach to social work practice entails an understanding of power. However, ...
Taking the development of social work education in the UK as an example of some of the ways in which...
There can be little doubt that neoliberalism has replaced social democracy as the political consensu...
This paper explores the suggestion that younger students and social workers are more accepting of ne...