Animals in Disaster Social Work: An Intersectional Green Perspective Inclusive of Species.

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL WORK
British Journal of Social Work Pub Date : 2021-07-27 eCollection Date: 2021-07-01 DOI:10.1093/bjsw/bcab143
Heather Fraser, Nik Taylor, Damien W Riggs
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Disasters do not just affect humans. And humans do not only live with, care for or interact with other humans. In this conceptual article, we explain how animals are relevant to green and disaster social work. Power, oppression and politics are our themes. We start the discussion by defining disasters and providing examples of how three categories of animals are affected by disasters, including in the current COVID-19 pandemic. They are: companion animals (pets), farmed animals (livestock) and free-living animals (wildlife), all of whom we classify as oppressed populations. Intersectional feminist, de-colonising and green social work ideas are discussed in relation to disaster social work. We argue that social work needs to include nonhuman animals in its consideration of person-in-environment, and offer an expanded version of feminist intersectionality inclusive of species as a way forward.

灾难社会工作中的动物:包括物种在内的绿色交叉视角。
灾害不仅仅影响人类。人类也不仅仅与其他人类一起生活、照顾或互动。在这篇概念性文章中,我们将解释动物如何与绿色和灾难社会工作相关。权力、压迫和政治是我们的主题。在开始讨论时,我们首先对灾害进行了定义,并举例说明了三类动物是如何受到灾害影响的,包括在当前的 COVID-19 大流行中。它们是:伴侣动物(宠物)、养殖动物(牲畜)和自由生活的动物(野生动物),我们将它们都归类为受压迫人群。我们结合灾害社会工作讨论了跨部门女权主义、去殖民化和绿色社会工作理念。我们认为,社会工作需要将非人类动物纳入其对人与环境的考虑中,并提供了一个包括物种在内的女权主义交叉性的扩展版本,作为前进的方向。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
22.20%
发文量
208
期刊介绍: Published for the British Association of Social Workers, this is the leading academic social work journal in the UK. It covers every aspect of social work, with papers reporting research, discussing practice, and examining principles and theories. It is read by social work educators, researchers, practitioners and managers who wish to keep up to date with theoretical and empirical developments in the field.
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