Decolonial Methodologies in Social Work
Foregrounding Pluriversalism in Teaching and Research
Contributor(s)
Abay, Robel (editor)
Klages, Anna-Lisa (editor)
Lugo, Sara Rodríguez (editor)
Kleibl, Tanja (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
This open access book offers an original exploration of how the notion of pluriversalism, an anti-colonial concept that resounds throughout many decolonial methodologies and pedagogies, underlies many current attempts to develop more just and equitable approaches to social work teaching and research. Despite its prominence in other fields, pluriversalism has never been foregrounded in any full-length study of social work. This co-edited volume does just that, and in so doing, it codifies a thriving, but otherwise diffuse, subcurrent of alternative, othered ways of researching and teaching social work. It foregrounds local knowledges while maintaining a global scope and empirically grounded perspective, and in so doing it shows how pluriversal approaches open new spaces around the world for teaching and talking about social work in a manner that is more just, culturally sensitive, and attuned to structural power relations. In that same self-critical spirit, the chapters gathered here also engage critically with the risks of cultural appropriation endemic to pluriversal approaches, themselves, appropriations that would ultimately reproduce the exploitation mechanisms they aim to resist. This is a must-read for social work students, researchers, and practitioners interested in development studies, decolonial studies, and Indigenous studies. The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the Bloomsbury Open Collections Library Collective.
Keywords
Social work; Social work research; Social work education; Decolonization; Decolonizing methodologies; Decolonizing social work; Postcolonial social work; Decolonial social workISBN
9781350419216Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)Publication date and place
London, 2025Imprint
Bloomsbury AcademicClassification
Social work
Decolonisation and postcolonial studies
Decolonisation of knowledge / Decoloniality
Research methods: general
Colonialism and imperialism
Human rights, civil rights
Social research and statistics
