Reinventing Critical Social Work :

Although a critical tradition has existed in the social work profession since its inception more than a century ago, a distinct and internally diverse critical social work canon emerged only in the 1960s and 1970s. Substantial structural changes over the past four decades, including the rise of glo...

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Main Author: Karen Healy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Windsor 2018-12-01
Series:Critical Social Work
Online Access:https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5618
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spelling doaj-840d433ad42b4df6bd6112d1b598dcb72020-11-25T02:04:01ZengUniversity of WindsorCritical Social Work1543-93722018-12-0121Reinventing Critical Social Work :Karen Healy Although a critical tradition has existed in the social work profession since its inception more than a century ago, a distinct and internally diverse critical social work canon emerged only in the 1960s and 1970s. Substantial structural changes over the past four decades, including the rise of globalisation and market driven approaches to the management of human services, already threaten the continuation of critical practice traditions in social work. Indeed, some critical social workers have declared the halcyon days of activist practice have now passed. The paper reviews contemporary contests from within the critical tradition to the core assumptions of critical practice theory. These challenges arise from practice, from critical analyses of the changing environment of public administration and from postmodern analyses. It is argued that these contests provide sites for the reinvention of critical practice theory towards more collaborative and open ended approaches to activism in social work. By recognising the challenges from within, critical social workers can strengthen and diversify their capacity to forge critical approaches relevant to social work in the 21st century. https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5618
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karen Healy
spellingShingle Karen Healy
Reinventing Critical Social Work :
Critical Social Work
author_facet Karen Healy
author_sort Karen Healy
title Reinventing Critical Social Work :
title_short Reinventing Critical Social Work :
title_full Reinventing Critical Social Work :
title_fullStr Reinventing Critical Social Work :
title_full_unstemmed Reinventing Critical Social Work :
title_sort reinventing critical social work :
publisher University of Windsor
series Critical Social Work
issn 1543-9372
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Although a critical tradition has existed in the social work profession since its inception more than a century ago, a distinct and internally diverse critical social work canon emerged only in the 1960s and 1970s. Substantial structural changes over the past four decades, including the rise of globalisation and market driven approaches to the management of human services, already threaten the continuation of critical practice traditions in social work. Indeed, some critical social workers have declared the halcyon days of activist practice have now passed. The paper reviews contemporary contests from within the critical tradition to the core assumptions of critical practice theory. These challenges arise from practice, from critical analyses of the changing environment of public administration and from postmodern analyses. It is argued that these contests provide sites for the reinvention of critical practice theory towards more collaborative and open ended approaches to activism in social work. By recognising the challenges from within, critical social workers can strengthen and diversify their capacity to forge critical approaches relevant to social work in the 21st century.
url https://ojs.uwindsor.ca/index.php/csw/article/view/5618
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