Social workers who are committed to the critical tradition need to critically reflect on their own positioning in systems of inequality. Consequently, one of the key challenges facing critical social work educators is how to encourage social work students, who are members of privileged groups, to acknowledge their privilege and their complicity in the oppression of others. This chapter outlines a transformational model for a critical pedagogy of the privileged that is informed by two critical social theorists, Joan Tronto and Iris Marion Young. Tronto has coined the term ‘privileged irresponsibility’ to describe the process by which members of privileged groups expect others to care for them without any acknowledgement. Such a process allow...
Background: Redressing inequality, discrimination and oppression are core for social work practice. ...
The terms such as: humiliation, discrimination, domination, privileges, symbolic power, violence com...
Peggy McIntosh likens white privilege within American culture to an “invisible package of unearned a...
Social workers who are committed to the critical tradition need to critically reflect on their own p...
Critical reflection is promoted by many progressive social work writers as a process for facilitatin...
ABSTRACT Contemporary efforts to rethink the philosophical foundation of critical pedagogy are part ...
Critical Social Work starts from the premise that a central goal of social work practice is social c...
This paper will argue that wealth and income inequality are among the most pressing issues for conte...
This paper will argue that wealth and income inequality are among the most pressing issues for conte...
Critical Social Work starts from the premise that a central goal of social work practice is social c...
The Routledge Handbook of Critical Pedagogies for Social Work traverses new territory by providing a...
Faced with the facts of economic inequality, the wealthy are confronted with a particular set of mor...
This article explores possibilities and responsibilities for social work to further a social justice...
Anti-oppressive social work has become a central topic among social work scholars, guiding the analy...
This article explores possibilities and responsibilities for social work to further a social justice...
Background: Redressing inequality, discrimination and oppression are core for social work practice. ...
The terms such as: humiliation, discrimination, domination, privileges, symbolic power, violence com...
Peggy McIntosh likens white privilege within American culture to an “invisible package of unearned a...
Social workers who are committed to the critical tradition need to critically reflect on their own p...
Critical reflection is promoted by many progressive social work writers as a process for facilitatin...
ABSTRACT Contemporary efforts to rethink the philosophical foundation of critical pedagogy are part ...
Critical Social Work starts from the premise that a central goal of social work practice is social c...
This paper will argue that wealth and income inequality are among the most pressing issues for conte...
This paper will argue that wealth and income inequality are among the most pressing issues for conte...
Critical Social Work starts from the premise that a central goal of social work practice is social c...
The Routledge Handbook of Critical Pedagogies for Social Work traverses new territory by providing a...
Faced with the facts of economic inequality, the wealthy are confronted with a particular set of mor...
This article explores possibilities and responsibilities for social work to further a social justice...
Anti-oppressive social work has become a central topic among social work scholars, guiding the analy...
This article explores possibilities and responsibilities for social work to further a social justice...
Background: Redressing inequality, discrimination and oppression are core for social work practice. ...
The terms such as: humiliation, discrimination, domination, privileges, symbolic power, violence com...
Peggy McIntosh likens white privilege within American culture to an “invisible package of unearned a...