The Nature of Social Work: An Ecocentered Analysis of Key Social Work Statements

Author:

Levin Lia1,Nevo Mali2

Affiliation:

1. Bob Shapell School of Social Work, Tel Aviv University PhD, is a senior lecturer, , POB 39040, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel

2. Bob Shapell School of Social Work, Tel Aviv University PhD, is a postdoctoral fellow, , Israel

Abstract

Abstract This article addresses references to people’s natural environments in some of the central declarative statements that shape social work worldwide. Four types of documents were analyzed, including statements associated with the Global Definition of Social Work, the Global Standards for Social Work Education and Training, the Global Social Work Statement of Ethical Principles, and the Grand Challenges for Social Work initiative. The analysis was driven by a critical-interpretive approach, seeking explicit and possibly implied references to nature and the environment across documents, with special attention to themes concerning the relationship between micro and macro perspectives, disciplinarity and inter- or transdisciplinarity, and relations between humankind and nature. In general, direct references to social work’s possible intersections with issues related to nature and the natural environment were scarce in the materials examined. That having been said, our analysis did find that ecocentered interpretations enable locating prospective “bridges” for the incorporation of deeper ecological perceptions of social work into statements. Such findings constitute a call to action, and the possible implications of continuing to broadly disregard ecological aspects of social work in core materials published by influential professional institutions are discussed.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

Reference56 articles.

1. Social work, climate change and global cooperation;Alston;International Social Work,2015

2. Social Work in Post-Disaster Sites

3. Grand Challenges for Social Work;American Academy of Social Work & Social Welfare,2018

4. Eco-social work in action: A place for community gardens;Bailey;Australian Social Work,2018

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