The Routledge international handbook of feminisms in social work / edited by Carolyn Noble, Shahana Rasool, Linda Harms-Smith, Gianinna Munoz-Arce and Donna Baines.

Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
First edition.
Published/​Created
  • Abingdon, England : Routledge, [2024]
  • ©2024
Description
1 online resource (683 pages)

Details

Subject(s)
Editor
Series
Summary note
This handbook highlights innovative and affect-driven feminist dialogues, that inspires social work practice, education and research across the globe. The editors have actively gathered the many (at times silenced) feminist voices and their allies together in this book which reflects current and contested feminist landscapes.
Source of description
  • Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
  • Description based on print version record.
Contents
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Series Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • About the Editors
  • List of Contributors
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • Section 1 Decoloniality, Indigeneity and Radical Theorising
  • 1 Feminisms in Social Work Practice
  • 2 Locating African Feminism, Womanisms, and Nego-Feminism -  Possibilities for Social Work
  • 3 Colored Demarcations in Postcolonial Feminism: Can the Subalterned Social Worker now Speak?
  • 4 Reversing a One-Track History: Listening to Minority Voices at the Intersections of Gender, Race and Intellectual Disability
  • 5 Privileging Indigenous Knowledge and Wisdom as Feminist Social Work Practitioners
  • 6 Tensions and Dialogues between Intersectional and Decolonial Feminist Contributions to Latin American Social Work
  • 7 Social Work and Marxism: Unitary Perspective in the Anti-racist, Feminist, and Anti-imperialist Struggle
  • 8 Social Work, Indigenous Feminisms and Decolonisation of Public Policies in Chile
  • 9 The Intersectionality Body-territory-daily life in Mayan-Xinka Community Feminism. Its Importance for Social Work
  • 10 Feminism, Politics, and Social Work
  • Section 2 Feminist Social Work in Fields of Practice
  • 11 Gender Empowerment in youth Work in Palestine: A Missing Link
  • 12 A Critical Race Feminist Rights (CRFR) Social Work Approach to Trafficking of Women in South Africa
  • 13 #Reporting Worries: Narratives of Sexual Harassment and Intersecting Inequalities in Swedish Social Work
  • 14 Nego-feminist Practices Adopted by Senior Women Traditional Leaders in Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa to Address Women Abuse
  • 15 Feminist Social Work Practice and Efforts towards Gender Equality in Australia
  • 16 The Impact of Patriarchy on Premarital Relationships in Nigeria.
  • 17 Where do I Belong? Feminism, Social Work, and Women with Intellectual Disabilities
  • 18 An Intersectional Feminist Analysis of Australian print Media Representations of Sexual Violence by Indian Men: Implications for Social Work
  • 19 Commentary - Resisting Carcerality, Embracing Abolition Implications for Feminist Social Work Practice
  • 20 Feminisms and Social Work: The Development of an Emancipatory Practice
  • Section 3 Academy and Feminist Research
  • 21 Knowing Subjects? Feminist Epistemologies, power Struggles and Social Work Research
  • 22 Feminist Participatory Action Research with breast Cancer Survivors in China
  • 23 Feminist Research in Social Work: Epistemological-methodological keys from the South
  • 24 Feminist Queries: Exploring Feminist Social Work Research Questions
  • 25 Academia and Gender Disparities: A Critical Historical Analysis of Academic Careers of Chilean Social Workers from a Feminist-intersectional Approach
  • 26 Creating Space for Critical Feminist Social Work Pedagogy
  • 27 Feminist Leadership and Social Work: The Experience of Women Leaders in Palestinian Universities
  • 28 The Contributions of Latin American Feminisms to Social Work Undergraduate Academic Training in Argentina
  • Section 4 The Politics of Care
  • 29 Life-sustaining Communitarian Weavings: Feminist Interpellations of the Approach of Community Social Work
  • 30 Incubators of the Future: Motherhood, Biology and Pre-birth Social Work in Feminist Practice
  • 31 Parenting through Mental Health Challenges: Intersections of Gender, Race, Class and Power
  • 32 Social Work and two types of Maternalism: Supporting Single Mothers through Strategic Maternalism
  • 33 Matricentric Feminist Social Work: Towards an Organising Conceptual Framework and Practice Approach to Support Empowered Mothering.
  • 34 Feminized Care Work, Social Work and Resistance in the Context of late Neoliberalism
  • Section 5 Allyship, Profeminisms and Queer Perspectives
  • 35 Social Work Reckons with Cisnormativity &
  • the Gender Binary
  • 36 Marica and Travesti Interpellations to Conservative Social Work Practices
  • 37 Generation old and Proud: No Going back in the Closet
  • 38 Heteropatriarchy and Child Sexual Abuse: Contemplating Profeminist Practice with men Victim-survivors
  • 39 Making men Allies in Stopping men's Violence via Processes of Intersectional Identification: A Study of Swedish Profeminist Men
  • 40 Men, Feminist Welfare, and Allyship in Social Work Education
  • 41 'Men' as Social Workers: Professional Identities, Practices and Education
  • 42 Ally Work at the Intersections: Theorising for Practice and Practicing for theory
  • 43 Beyond Alternative Masculinities and men's Allyship: Troubling men's Engagement with Feminisms in Social Work and Human Services Practice
  • Section 6 Social Movements, Engaging with the Environment, and the More-than-human
  • 44 Deliberate Democracy and the MeToo Movement: Examining the Impact of Social Media Feminist Discourses in India
  • 45 "We can't just sit back and say it's too Hard": Older Women, Social Justice, and Activism
  • 46 Feminist Social Work Responses to Intersectional Oppression Faced by Ethnic Minority Women in Japan
  • 47 The Contribution of Feminist new Materialism to Social Work
  • 48 Eco-femagogy: A Red-green Perspective for Transforming Social Work Education in the Post-covid World
  • 49 Intersectionality, Feminist Social Work, Animals and the Politics of Meat
  • 50 Ecofeminism and the Popular Solidarity Economy in Latin American Social Work: Resistance to the Patriarchal and Capitalist System
  • 51 The Futures of Writing with Posthuman Feminism in Social Work.
  • 52 Eco-feminist Responses to Climate Change and its Gendered Impacts
  • Index.
ISBN
  • 1-04-003000-9
  • 1-003-31737-5
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