同伴支持作为社区关怀的工具:“没有我们,没有我们”

Shinjini Bakshi
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引用次数: 4

摘要

面对社会政治边缘化,一线社区通过利用同伴的智慧和韧性重新获得权力。2020年标志着全球大流行病与对针对黑人的种族主义和警察暴力的普遍抵制的汇合,突出了同龄人的声音和社区观点的价值。为了在社区护理中废除和超越拘谨的方法,社会工作领域被邀请加入一个更大的反拘谨精神健康运动,该运动尊重生活经验,并与同行一起建立精神卫生保健的身份肯定结构。本文考察了一线社区如何从扩大获得正式和非正式的反暴力同伴支持中获益,这是一种心理健康安全网,可以阻断伤害并优先考虑代理、同意和自决。本文通过反暴力社会工作、废除和交叉性的理论框架,拓宽了社会工作对同伴支持的概念。社会工作及其邻近领域被呼吁通过倡导将正式和非正式的同伴支持整合到精神健康政策和实践中来紧急关注黑人解放、集体治疗和社区护理。本文通过利用脚注和引文来模拟人权运动中同伴劳动的伦理承认,战略性地倾向于批判性同伴思想学术的谱系。这种有意识的结构促进了激进的团结,抵制对有生活经验的人的剥削。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Peer Support as a Tool for Community Care: “Nothing About Us, Without Us”
In the face of socio-political marginalization, frontline communities reclaim power by harnessing peer wisdom and resilience. The year 2020 marked the confluence of a global pandemic and widespread resistance against anti-Black racism and police violence, highlighting the value of peer voices and community perspectives. To dismantle and transcend carceral approaches to community care, the field of social work is invited to join a larger anti-carceral mental health movement that honors lived experience and works alongside peers to build identity-affirming structures of mental health care. This article examines the ways in which frontline communities benefit from expanded access to anti-carceral formal and informal peer support as a mental health safety net that interrupts harm and prioritizes agency, consent, and self-determination. This paper broadens social work’s conceptualization of peer support through theoretical frameworks of anti-carceral social work, abolition, and intersectionality. Social work and its adjacent fields are called to urgently center Black liberation, collective healing, and community care by advocating for the integration of formal and informal peer support into mental health policy and practice. This paper strategically leans into a lineage of critical peer thought scholarship by utilizing footnotes and citations to model the ethical acknowledgment of peer labor within human rights movements. This intentional structure promotes radical solidarity that resists the exploitation of people with lived experience.
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