Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work Identity

Within dominant North American discourse, individual freedom is a substantive tag line for the mind-numbing tacit approval of the loveless marriage between capitalism and democracy. This paper provides an overview of the conflicted relationship social work have with the politics of liberation, empo...

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Main Author: Liza Lorenzetti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2019-05-01
Series:Critical Social Work
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5881
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spelling doaj-62c9cbaa304947ceb6281da094b19d452020-11-25T04:04:34ZengUniversity of WindsorCritical Social Work1543-93722019-05-0114210.22329/csw.v14i2.5881Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work IdentityLiza Lorenzetti0Instructor with the Faculty of Social Work, University of Calgary Within dominant North American discourse, individual freedom is a substantive tag line for the mind-numbing tacit approval of the loveless marriage between capitalism and democracy. This paper provides an overview of the conflicted relationship social work have with the politics of liberation, empowerment theory, and self-determination, underscoring an ongoing identity crisis, which has been dressed-up as ‘various tenets of the profession’. Connecting with the humanizing aspirations inherent to social work while building on critical and anti-oppressive theories and practices, I argue for social work to re-visualize and act on a cohesive emancipatory social work identity. True solidarity, which can only be uncovered through the relinquishing of a professional identity based on false consciousness and fear, is risking an act of love. https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5881critical social workanti-oppresionempowermentliberation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liza Lorenzetti
spellingShingle Liza Lorenzetti
Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work Identity
Critical Social Work
critical social work
anti-oppresion
empowerment
liberation
author_facet Liza Lorenzetti
author_sort Liza Lorenzetti
title Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work Identity
title_short Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work Identity
title_full Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work Identity
title_fullStr Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work Identity
title_full_unstemmed Developing a Cohesive Emancipatory Social Work Identity
title_sort developing a cohesive emancipatory social work identity
publisher University of Windsor
series Critical Social Work
issn 1543-9372
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Within dominant North American discourse, individual freedom is a substantive tag line for the mind-numbing tacit approval of the loveless marriage between capitalism and democracy. This paper provides an overview of the conflicted relationship social work have with the politics of liberation, empowerment theory, and self-determination, underscoring an ongoing identity crisis, which has been dressed-up as ‘various tenets of the profession’. Connecting with the humanizing aspirations inherent to social work while building on critical and anti-oppressive theories and practices, I argue for social work to re-visualize and act on a cohesive emancipatory social work identity. True solidarity, which can only be uncovered through the relinquishing of a professional identity based on false consciousness and fear, is risking an act of love.
topic critical social work
anti-oppresion
empowerment
liberation
url https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5881
work_keys_str_mv AT lizalorenzetti developingacohesiveemancipatorysocialworkidentity
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