Description
Intersectionality for Social Workers
A Practical Introduction to Theory and Practice
Author: Bernard Claudia
Language: EnglishSubject for Intersectionality for Social Workers:
Keywords
Intersectionality and Anti-Oppressive Practice; Super-Diversity; Intersectionality and Mental Health Social Work; Intersectionality and Social Work with Older People; Intersectionality and Child and Family Social Work; Intersectionality and Social Work; Intersectionality; Social Work; Intersectional Approaches; Social Work Research; Intersectional Lens; Mental Health Social Work; Social Work Practice; Anti-Oppressive Practice; Social Work Education; Family Social Work; Face To Face; Intersectional Perspective; Black Women’s Lived Experiences; Adult Social Care Services; Integrate Research Knowledge; FGM; Mental Health Act Assessment; Adult Social Care; Intersectional Thinking; Social Work Education Literature; Mental Health; Multiple Marginalised Identities; Multiple Stigmatised Identities; Black Feminist; Mental Health System; Intersectional Stigma
Publication date: 12-2021
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Publication date: 12-2021
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Description
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This book explores how intersectionality theory can be applied to social work practice with children and families, older people and mental health service users, and used to engage with diversity and difference in social work education and research.
With case-study examples and practice questions throughout, the book provides a model for integrating intersectionality theory into social work practice. It highlights the ways intersectional theory helps us to understand the complexities of working with the interlocking nature of problematised elements such as gender, race, class, sexuality, disability, and other axes of structural inequalities experienced by groups in subjugated social locations. Intersectionality is used to examine multiple forms of inequalities and the complexities and questions they give rise to in social work practice. The emphasis throughout is that intersectional approaches can open up social work practice to new understandings of the complex linkages of multiple and intersecting systems of oppression that shape the lived experiences of diverse groups of service users.
Providing an introduction to an intersectional theoretical framework for understanding the lives and experiences of socially disadvantaged service users, Intersectionality for Social Workers will be required reading on all modules on anti-oppressive and anti-discriminatory practice, sociology, and ethics and values in social work.
1. Introduction. 2. Intersectionality Theory. 3. Employing Intersectionality in Children and Families Social Work. 4. Intersectionality in Mental Health Social Work. 5. Intersectionality and Social Work with Older People. 6. Intersectionality as Pedagogical Practice in Social Work Education. 7. Intersectional Approaches and Social Work Research. 8. Concluding Thoughts
Claudia Bernard is Professor of Social Work in the Department of Social, Therapeutic and Community Studies at Goldsmiths, University of London, UK.