Mechanisms of Gatekeeping in the Social Work Profession: Lessons Learned from Canada, Hong Kong and South Korea

Author:

Yan Miu Chung1,Lee Jinah2,Chan Edward Ko Ling3

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Work The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada

2. Department of Social Welfare, Catholic University of Pusan, Pusan, Korea

3. Department of Applied Social Sciences, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong SAR, China

Abstract

Abstract Striving to be a full-fledged profession with statutorily delegated self-regulatory authority has been a goal of the social work profession in many countries since Abraham Flexner’s (1915 ‘Is social work a profession?’, Paper presented at the Forty-Second Annual Session of The National Conference of Charities and Correction, Baltimore, MD, pp. 581, 584–8, 590. denial of its professional status in the USA. A full self-regulation requires two gatekeeping mechanisms: professional education and registration. Whereas professional social work education has been in place in many parts of the world, the establishment of a mandatory registration system is still limited to a few countries. Although two mechanisms share the same mandate and function as self-regulation, they tend to be discussed separately in the literature. How they connect and work with each other is seldom explored. In this article, by examining the development of these two mechanisms in Canada, Hong Kong and South Korea, we present three different ways of how these mechanisms are connected and discuss observations of those connections.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health (social science)

Reference38 articles.

1. Self-regulating professions: Past, present, future;Adams;Journal of Professions and Organization,2017

2. ‘Competency-based standards and regulating social work practice: Liabilities to professional sustainability’;Barter;Canadian Social Work Review,2012

3. Gatekeeping: A critical review;Barzilai-Nahon;Annual Review of Information Science and Technology,2011

4. Continuing education, registration and professional identity in New Zealand social work;Beddoe;International Social Work,2015

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