Intersectionality in Social Work (eBook, PDF)
Activism and Practice in Context
Redaktion: Nayak, Suryia; Robbins, Rachel
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Intersectionality in Social Work (eBook, PDF)
Activism and Practice in Context
Redaktion: Nayak, Suryia; Robbins, Rachel
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Bringing intersectionality to the forefront of social work within a Black feminist framework this book is concerned with practice and action that transgresses boundaries of race, religion and citizenship, to invoke the idea of social work without borders. It offers a unique, sustained critical analysis of the psychological impact of oppressive social structures from diverse range of international standpoints and will appeal to all those concerned by inequality and injustice in social work as well as those with research interests gender studies, race and ethnicity and sociology.
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 270
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. September 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351810814
- Artikelnr.: 54151608
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 270
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. September 2018
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781351810814
- Artikelnr.: 54151608
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
(Suryia Nayak and Rachel Robbins); Part 1: Understandings of
Intersectionality; Chapter 1: Textual Practice as Intersectional Practice:
Situated Caste and Gender Knowledge in India (Suryia Nayak and Rekha
Sethi); Chapter 2: Returning Home: Intersectionality, Social Work and
Violence against BME Women and Girls in the UK (Hannana Siddiqui and Ravi
K. Thiara); Chapter 3: The Detachment of Intersectionality from its Black
Feminist Roots: A Critical Analysis of Social Service Provision Training
Material Based in Ontario (Edward Hon-Sing Wong); Chapter 4: The politics
of intersectionality as location (Andrew Hollingworth); Chapter 5: Gendered
Islamophobia- intersectionality, religion and space for British South Asian
Muslim women (Rashida Bibi); Chapter 6: State Building in Kosova: An
intersectional analysis (Kaltrina Kusari); Chapter 7: Reflections on the
theory and practice of intersectionality: immigration and health provision
services in Brazil (Ilana Mountian and Elena Calvo-Gonzalez); Part 2:
Realizations of the activism of Intersectionality; Chapter 8: revolutionary
spaces? [re]imagining and transforming work to end violence against black
women and girls (Dorett Jones and Marai Larasi); Chapter 9: Understanding
the Macroaggressions Underscoring the Invisibility of Black Female Victims
of Police Violence within Black Lives Matter Protests (Kamaria Muntu);
Chapter 10: "They like you to pretend to be something you are not": An
exploration of working with the intersections of gender, sexuality, 'race',
religion and 'refugeeness', through the experience of Lesbian Immigration
Support Group (LISG) members and volunteers (Nina Held and Karen McCarthy
); Chapter 11: Indian women on the margins of nation and feminism (Sonia
Soans); Chapter 12: Fault Lines: Black Feminist Intersectional Practice
Working to End Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) (Camille Kumar);
Chapter 13: The impossibility of adulthood with a learning disability and
the possibilities of digital activism (Rachel Robbins); Chapter 14: The
Activism of Intersectionality: A Tool for feminist Political Articulations,
Possibilities, Tensions and Challenges (Itziar Gandarias Goikoetxea);
Chapter 15: Breaking the Silence: Women, Intersectionality, Community Radio
and Empowerment (Annette Rimmer); Conclusion: Contextual Intersectionality:
A Conversation (Suryia Nayak, Marisela Montenegro, and Joan Pujol); Index
(Suryia Nayak and Rachel Robbins); Part 1: Understandings of
Intersectionality; Chapter 1: Textual Practice as Intersectional Practice:
Situated Caste and Gender Knowledge in India (Suryia Nayak and Rekha
Sethi); Chapter 2: Returning Home: Intersectionality, Social Work and
Violence against BME Women and Girls in the UK (Hannana Siddiqui and Ravi
K. Thiara); Chapter 3: The Detachment of Intersectionality from its Black
Feminist Roots: A Critical Analysis of Social Service Provision Training
Material Based in Ontario (Edward Hon-Sing Wong); Chapter 4: The politics
of intersectionality as location (Andrew Hollingworth); Chapter 5: Gendered
Islamophobia- intersectionality, religion and space for British South Asian
Muslim women (Rashida Bibi); Chapter 6: State Building in Kosova: An
intersectional analysis (Kaltrina Kusari); Chapter 7: Reflections on the
theory and practice of intersectionality: immigration and health provision
services in Brazil (Ilana Mountian and Elena Calvo-Gonzalez); Part 2:
Realizations of the activism of Intersectionality; Chapter 8: revolutionary
spaces? [re]imagining and transforming work to end violence against black
women and girls (Dorett Jones and Marai Larasi); Chapter 9: Understanding
the Macroaggressions Underscoring the Invisibility of Black Female Victims
of Police Violence within Black Lives Matter Protests (Kamaria Muntu);
Chapter 10: "They like you to pretend to be something you are not": An
exploration of working with the intersections of gender, sexuality, 'race',
religion and 'refugeeness', through the experience of Lesbian Immigration
Support Group (LISG) members and volunteers (Nina Held and Karen McCarthy
); Chapter 11: Indian women on the margins of nation and feminism (Sonia
Soans); Chapter 12: Fault Lines: Black Feminist Intersectional Practice
Working to End Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) (Camille Kumar);
Chapter 13: The impossibility of adulthood with a learning disability and
the possibilities of digital activism (Rachel Robbins); Chapter 14: The
Activism of Intersectionality: A Tool for feminist Political Articulations,
Possibilities, Tensions and Challenges (Itziar Gandarias Goikoetxea);
Chapter 15: Breaking the Silence: Women, Intersectionality, Community Radio
and Empowerment (Annette Rimmer); Conclusion: Contextual Intersectionality:
A Conversation (Suryia Nayak, Marisela Montenegro, and Joan Pujol); Index