NEOLIBERALISM AND SOCIAL WORK REGULATION

Barbara Heron
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The question of how through social work practice, theory and research social workers engage in “epistemic disobedience” in respect to the “epistemicide” of Others’ knowledges is crucial in the current neolielberal context. However, the possibilities of such resistance are becoming increasingly constrained by the encroachment of licensing requirements for social work professionals. This paper considers how the turn to professional regulation in social work via licensing competency standards further entrenches Western ways of knowing, while at the same time working in concert with neoliberalism to transform the social work profession in ways that stand to remove it from the reach of epistemic disobedience. The Canadian Council of Social Work Regulators’ competency standards are taken as the starting point for an analysis, which seeks to articulate the intersecting impacts of neoliberalism in social work practice, and the crucial place of social work regulation within this web of effects. In conclusion, the implications for social work education are raised and the urgency of epistemic resistance is considered.
新自由主义与社会工作监管
在当前的新自由主义背景下,社会工作者如何通过社会工作实践、理论和研究来参与“知识不服从”(epistemic disobedience),以反对“知识灭绝”(epistemicide)他人的知识,这一问题至关重要。然而,由于社会工作专业人员执照要求的侵蚀,这种抵抗的可能性越来越受到限制。本文考虑了通过许可能力标准向社会工作专业监管的转变如何进一步巩固了西方的认知方式,同时与新自由主义合作,以某种方式改变社会工作专业,使其摆脱认知不服从的影响。加拿大社会工作监管委员会的能力标准被作为分析的起点,旨在阐明新自由主义在社会工作实践中的交叉影响,以及社会工作监管在这一影响网络中的关键地位。最后,提出了对社会工作教育的启示,并考虑了认识抵抗的紧迫性。
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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