Students must write a 5-page paper on the importance of Anti-Oppression Social Work practice within the context of their Field Practicumand the importance of adhering to this type of practic
Students must write a 5-page paper on the importance of Anti-Oppression Social Work practice within the context of their “Field Practicum” and the importance of adhering to this type of practice. Students should include (5 Literary, Scholarly Sources) and be sure to give examples of how they will “check their privilege” in their administration of social services. Please be sure to reference your anti-oppression articles.
Rubric- Please be sure to review the rubric carefully prior to starting your assignment. Following the rubric will yield the most potential for earning a higher grade.
SWK 530
Grading Rubric
Anti-Oppression Social Work Practice Paper – 200 Points
Students must write a 5-page paper on the importance of Anti-Oppression Social Work practice within the context of their “Field Practicum”, and the importance of adhering to this type of practice. In your paper, please describe what anti-oppressive social work practice is and its importance. Demonstrate that you understand the tenants and terminology of anti-oppressive practice. Briefly describe your field practicum agency and community. Discuss anti-oppressive social work practice in the context of the field agency. Students should include (5 Scholarly Literary Sources), and be sure to give examples of how they will “check their privilege” in their administration of social services. NOTE: If you are not currently enrolled in a field placement, you may select “Option B” on the rubric to complete your paper. (Competency 3)
Rubric- Please be sure to review the rubric carefully prior to starting your assignment. Following the rubric will yield the most potential for earning a higher grade. To view your rubric for this assignment, click on the assignment title under this week in blackboard. On the right/middle of the page, near the points possible for this assignment, you'll see a little button that says "View Rubric". Click that button and the rubric used to grade the assignment will appear. I will grade your assignment exactly from the rubric. Thank you and good luck!
Instruction |
Feedback |
Possible Points |
Earned Points |
*Introduction: Brief summary of the main points of the paper letting the reader know what to expect. |
25 |
||
*Anti-Oppression: Describe what anti-oppressive social work practice is and its importance. Demonstrate that you understand the tenants and terminology. |
50 |
||
*Anti-Oppression in Field: (Choose to write on Option A or B. Please clearly note clearly on the heading of your paper which option you are responding to in your paper. Option B is reserved for students with summer block practicum.) Option A: Briefly describe your field practicum agency and community. Discuss anti-oppressive social work practice in the context of the field agency. Demonstrate you understand the importance of this type of practice. Option B: Describe why adopting an anti-oppressive practice is important for your role as a social worker, serving marginalized populations. Describe 3 specific anti-oppressive practices you would implement; one at the micro, one mezzo, and one macro level of your social work practice. Demonstrate how you will integrate an anti-oppressive approach clinically when serving your clients as well as when developing policy affecting marginalized populations. |
75 |
||
References Reference the assigned readings and other relevant scholarly material. (A minimum of 5 scholarly sources are required). |
25 |
||
Organization Use the headings provided in this rubric and present organized sentences and paragraphs. First person is acceptable. All sentences are well constructed and have varied structure and length. No errors in grammar, mechanics, and/or spelling. APA style formatting is required for your paper. |
25 |
||
Total |
200 |
,
ANTI-OPPRESSIVE PRACTICE AND SOCIAL TRINITARIANISM: AN INTERCONNECTION OF FAITH AND SOCIAL WORK PRINCIPLES
By: Lydia Hogewoning
Presented at:
NACSW Convention 2012 October, 2012 St. Louis, MO
Abstract
Anti-oppressive social work (AOP) provides an important model towards identifying and
maintaining empowering client relationships in the context of existing oppression in society and
practice. Yet for Christian social workers, the question remains whether such a model, which is
postmodern in nature, can be upheld alongside faith values. Through examination of the Social
Trinitarian model, key theological principles are shown to reinforce AOP as a worthy model for
social workers to implement in practice. Drawing on the works of theologians Miroslav Volf and
Jurgen Moltmann, and social theorist Lena Dominelli, this paper demonstrates how a Social
Trinitarianism theology of love, equality, and openness to the other connects to core AOP
principles of empowerment and critical consciousness.
Keywords: Anti-oppressive Practice, Social Trinitarianism, Empowerment
Think of what defines social work practice. The term “oppressive” is not usually the first
adjective to come to mind. After all, social work, as defined by the International Federation of
Social Workers, is a profession seeking to “promote social change, problem solve in human
relationships, and empower people and groups to enhance [overall] well-being” (IFSW, 2012).
However, as contradictory and perhaps painful it is to admit, social work is associated with
oppression simply because it deals with broken human relations. Plain and simple, relationships
in every facet incorporate elements of exclusion and oppression resulting from sinful human
identities. In turn, Christian social workers bear the responsibility of analyzing the nature of
oppression in personal and professional relationships as a fundamental step in implementing the
type of service and profession defined above.
Social work practitioners seek to work by values and ethics which uphold social justice
and respect for the dignity of the other. Similarly, in Christianity believers seek to carry out
biblical commandments urging mankind to “love the Lord your God, and your neighbor as
yourself” (Matthew 22:29). So in response to oppression, how do Christian social workers merge
professional and religious mandates? As a leading social work model in response to the existence
of oppression in practice, AOP aligns with a Social Trinitarian model to provide key insights for
equitable relations in social work practice. Ultimately, through examining the nature of
oppression, the benefits of anti-oppressive theory, and the dimensions of Social Trinitarianism, it
becomes evident that Trinitarian themes endorse AOP methods, which Christian social workers
can adopt to increase empowering practitioner-client relations.
Exclusion
Before considering the use of AOP one must consider the need for it. One must consider
the nature of oppression, how it relates to and is present within social work, and how AOP is a
model Christian social workers can adopt.
The nature of oppression infiltrates all aspects of life. Lena Dominelli (2002), a leading
social work theorist, defines oppression as “relations that divide people into dominant or superior
groups and subordinate or inferior ones. These relations of domination consist of the systematic
devaluing of the attributes and contributions of those deemed inferior, and their exclusion from
the social resources available to those in the dominant group” (p. 8). Exclusion, which ultimately
results from oppression, is a significant concern for social workers.
Theologian Miroslav Volf speaks considerably to the nature of exclusion and injustice in
his book, Exclusion and Embrace. When humans experience a perceived threat to their personal
identities and lack the ability to maintain and affirm a unique identity, they exclude others by
contrasting themselves against a constructed, and inferior, identity of the other (Volf, 1996). To
better understand this, consider condemnation. According to psychologists, “people who form
patterns of condemnation frequently do it to enhance their own self-esteem because blaming or
criticizing another person makes one’s own qualities and behaviors appear better or superior”
(Hull & Kirst-Ashman, 2009, p. 312). Furthermore, Dominelli (2002) suggests that the very
nature of identity formation includes understanding one’s identity in relation to another. This
process is often evaluative, where the individual ends up measuring him/herself in a hierarchy
against the other based on the personal values he/she holds. Consequently, Dominelli (2002)
argues, hierarchy results in one identity or trait being regarded as superior to the other, thus
creating an “us-them” dynamic resulting in division and posing risk for oppression.
An additional component of exclusion and identity formation relates to how individuals
analyze their identities based on how they conform to larger societal expectations. As Volf
(1996) explains, people “are uncomfortable with anything that blurs accepted boundaries,
disturbs our identities, and disarranges our symbolic cultural maps” (p.78). Exclusion occurs
when individuals are either accommodated or rejected by society’s standards (for example,
consider xenophobia or stigma against single mothers as deviating from the traditional family
model). Thereby, exclusion acts as a way to “perpetuate the othering process which confirms
unequal social relations” (Dominelli, 2002, p. 39). Moreover, identity includes many cross-
sections including dimensions of age, race, ethnicity, gender, religion, sexual orientation,
physical appearance, and more, which may jointly result in a dynamic and complex form of
oppression. Lastly, the role of identity formation in oppression is universal. From a Christian
standpoint, oppression aligns with a Reformed view of the fallen nature of man—humans both
experience and perpetuate it (Newman, Suarez, & Reed, 2008).
The concept of oppression and exclusion concerns social workers because it opposes
values of self-determination and respect for the dignity and worth of all people (NASW, 1996).
Christian social workers must not only consider its existence in society but also its existence in
the very nature of social work practice. Acknowledging that identity formation and power play
an important role in oppressive practice, social workers must realize their professional identities
are tied to power, which can play an influential and sometimes unconscious role in causing
oppression.
Recognizing the power associated with the social work profession can be an
uncomfortable realization, especially considering the various anti-oppressive ethics which seek
to guide its practice. As Dominelli (2002) attests, for social workers to identify themselves as
the oppressors “can cause feelings of paralysis and guilt, especially where it is difficult for the
individual concerned to extricate him or herself from [the] privileged status” (p. 46).
Nevertheless, best practice methods include acknowledging these power structures and
addressing them at the following two levels. First, practitioners must explore to what degree their
personal social status aligns with the dominant social status of who holds power in regard to
policy decisions and accepted societal norms (Newman et al, 2008). What structural inequalities
does one’s lifestyle or very class reinforce? In reference to the population group the practitioner
works with, how does the practitioner’s lifestyle impact oppression faced by that population
group on a micro, mezzo, or macro level? For example, it is crucial for the practitioner and client
to consider the role of race in a therapeutic relationship if one is from a dominant race/ethnicity
and the other from a minority group. This recognition encompasses being aware and resistant to
reinforcing “hegemonic value systems and ways of knowing and viewing the world” which may
further disadvantage the client (Dominelli, 2002, p. 92).
Second, practitioners must examine to what extent they practice “authoritative work.” In
its nature as a helping profession, social work has the potential to be paternalistic in that the role
of the social worker is often to help or bestow knowledge on a vulnerable client group (Pitner &
Sakamoto, 2005). Dominelli (2002) critiques the traditional approach of viewing a client as
passively requiring the knowledge and skills of the practitioner. She argues that identifying
clients in need as “defective, percolates this configuration of the person and sets the context for
power-over dynamics to be (re)produced rather than egalitarian ones” (Dominelli, 2002, p. 98).
After all, Pitner and Sakamoto (2005) raise an interesting point—“who knows more about
oppression, those who teach it, or those who live it?” (p. 439).
Social workers must acknowledge their roles as having the potential to perpetuate
oppression in practice, primarily through homogenizing tendencies around client groups and
treating clients with the hope of outcomes rooted in personal values ingrained in the social
worker’s identity. For example, a social worker may unconsciously promote a nuclear family
model as a best outcome through reinforcing prescribed gender roles around custody and
parenting issues (Dominelli, 2002, p.51). Social work can also be oppressive through what
Dominelli (2002) refers to as the “acquisition of information approach.” This concept refers to a
practitioner’s aim to gain cultural competency through educating her/himself on a particular
identity group. For example, the social worker learns key facts about the other as if those cultural
identities are static, which reinforces the social worker, rather than the client, as the expert
(Dominelli, 2002).
In addition, this way of creating space for the other rarely considers how the social
worker’s identity relates to the client’s identity (Dominelli, 2002). Exposure through education
does not eliminate power divides—rather, “in naming or viewing the other as different, [social
workers] affirm their own identity as the norm, and fail to appreciate the significance of its
interactive capacity and exclusivity” (Dominelli, 2002, p. 53). Dominelli (2002) contests that
through the process of consciously or unconsciously applying stereotypes, social workers deny a
client’s agency and self-determination, including his/her “capacity to contest culture or engage in
its creation and recreation” (p.53). Anti-oppressive writers have written against modern theory
endorsing social work practice as “neutral” in respect to social bias, stating that it remains
embedded within a white, middle class perspective (Vanderwoerd, 2009). Social workers must
examine how practice may unconsciously reinforce marginalization. When practitioners strive to
allow client self-determination in practice without examining the influence of personal values
and biases in guiding client engagement, social workers may be reinforcing marginalizing
tendencies, even when it would be difficult to identify it as such (Coholic & Todd, 2007).
Oppressive Identities
Despite the collaboration and empowerment that occurs in social work, practitioners
cannot disregard the presence of personal identities as reinforcing oppressive structures and
encounters. As promoted by Newman et al. (2008), deconstruction of how “dominant discourses
are shaped, whose interests social workers serve and whose they may subjugate and the exposure
of the marginalized perspective, is an essential part of understanding power dynamics and the
risk of reinforced oppression” (p. 409). A commitment to social justice in social work practice
also involves personal reflection and responsibility beyond structural and societal advocacy.
Anti-oppressive theory, a post-modern perspective drawing on themes from feminist,
constructivist, ecological, and system theories, provides a social work model in reaction to
oppressive and dominating discourse in practice as further described below (Sakamoto & Pitner,
2005).
The Anti-Oppressive Model
In social work, the anti-oppressive model aims to function and promote equal, non-
oppressive social relations between various identities. As Dominelli (2002) defines it, “in
challenging established truths about identity, anti-oppressive practice seeks to subvert the
stability of universalized biological representations of social division to both validate diversity
and enhance solidarity based on celebrating difference amongst peoples” (p.39). Traditionally
and still today, this model analyzes and advocates against macro levels of oppression. It remains
dedicated to principles of social justice, which is also upheld in NASW values, by
acknowledging diversity within oppression and considering the intersection of the “isms” (Pitner
& Sakamoto, 2005). However, progressive AOP models emphasize social justice against
oppressive practice at the micro level through analyzing the sociological and psychological
components of oppression. A fundamental aspect of this analysis is through the discipline of
critical consciousness. Newman et al. (2008) explain critical consciousness as the reflective and
critical process of “challenging domination” on a personal, interpersonal, and structural level. It
is a “deconstruction of one’s stories or accounts of practice in which [the social worker] works
towards identifying [his/her] assumptions (theories or construction about power) and changing
these along more empowering lines” (Newman et al., 2008, p.409). Pitner and Sakamoto (2005)
outline two main methods for accomplishing critical consciousness. First, they endorse
standpoint theory in which practitioners are called to examine personal social identity and status
to gain self-awareness on their inherent biases. Second, social workers must be aware of their
“professional training schemas” through which they consider and interpret information within
practice (Pitner & Sakamoto, 2005). Anti-oppressive social work as a schema therefore “guides
[social workers] to listen for oppression” in practice with individuals, society, and structures
(Pitner & Sakamoto, 2005, p. 443). In turn, practitioners advocate against oppression through
social work practice by promoting increased respect for the “inherent dignity and worth of all
people,” and “social justice” (NASW, 1996). Acknowledging NASW values, along with “the
importance of human relationships,” remains an integral part of building empowering client-
practitioner relationships (NASW, 1996).
AOP & Christianity
Anti-oppressive practice remains an important model for the progressive implementation
of social work values; however, Christian social workers face the challenge of balancing the
post-modern approach with the modern “truths” fundamental to the Christian faith. Coholic and
Todd (2007) consider the compatibility of Christianity and AOP. They state that historically,
social work and religion have been closely tied. Historical examination reveals that “religious
interventions have contoured social work as a practice of beneficence and self-sacrifice in which
people, not institutions and cultures, are the object of change” (Coholic & Todd, 2007, p.9).
Moreover, they question whether Christian social workers have the ability to separate
fundamental religious values from impacting their ability to uphold client self-determination
(Coholic & Todd, 2007). Especially in response to the gradual academic and societal shift in
ideas on spirituality and sexuality, the authors question whether Christians, who profess to
uphold some kind of orthodoxy or “right practice,” inherently create exclusion or self-separation
as a way to preserve their “tradition” as truth (Coholic & Todd, 2007, p.8). Is it possible then for
Christians to maintain faith values and the truth of Christ while carrying out anti-oppressive
practice? Coholic and Todd (2007) may argue no, however, based on the examination of
Trinitarian themes, anti-oppressive social work does actually correspond with Christian ideas on
biblical human relationships, as will be demonstrated further on.
Before one considers the relation between AOP and Trinitarian themes, it is valuable to
contemplate whether AOP is a model Christian social workers should follow in the first place.
Several critiques against AOP exist and warrant explanation. First, AOP is criticized as being
post-modern and subjective in its attempt to validate people and views in an effort to remain un-
oppressive. As Volf (1996) promotes, extreme post-modern subjectivity can itself result in
oppression since it generalizes “new forms of exclusion by the very opposition to exclusionary
practices” (p.64). A subjective view of exclusion results in “non-order” where there is no clear
boundary on what is permissible or not in society, resulting in chaos (Volf, 1996, p. 64). Second,
another limitation of this model is the lack of consensus on a clear definition of AOP due to the
number of dynamic perspectives on what oppression encompasses (Pitner & Sakamoto, 2005).
Responses against oppression vary. For example, some see it as getting rid of all the ‘isms;’
others focus on a hierarchy of oppression; others view it as eliminating all power differentials;
still others see it as incorporating empowerment approaches (Pitner & Sakamoto, 2005). Lastly,
the AOP model is criticized for being too idealistic or “discouragingly lofty,” especially
considering one of its main objectives is “the eradication of all forms of structural oppression,”
making it largely unattainable for social workers to fully carry out or measure progress due to the
complexities of structural inequalities (Pitner & Sakamoto, 2005, p.438).
In response to the critique against post-modernism, AOP is less about determining truths
and values about society than it is about the greater concept of human relationships and the
challenge
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