(Re-)Imagining Social Work in the Anthropocene

被引:6
作者
Panagiotaros, Chris Victor [1 ]
Boddy, Jennifer [1 ]
Gray, Tonia [1 ]
Ife, Jim [1 ]
机构
[1] Western Sydney Univ, Sch Social Sci, Liverpool, Australia
关键词
adaptation; climate change; community development; ecology; environment; green social work; practice; COMMUNITY; HEALTH; SUSTAINABILITY; DEGROWTH;
D O I
10.1093/bjsw/bcac075
中图分类号
C916 [社会工作、社会管理、社会规划];
学科分类号
1204 ;
摘要
The climate crisis poses an enormous challenge for the future, and there is a growing awareness that 'environmental problems are also social problems' (, p. 1649). This article argues that social work has both an opportunity and a duty to respond to this contemporary crisis, but these responses must be imaginative and courageous. The authors hope the article instigates a discussion around developing multiple practice frameworks and expand the scope of practice required for climate mitigation and adaptation. Additionally, the authors invite the reader to undertake a process of re-imaging, not only social work practice but also the current socio-political-economic climate in which we live. The ecological crisis, marked by the Anthropocene epoch, is having a major impact on the global ecosystem, and the consequences are predicted to become increasingly severe in coming decades. The turbulence and uncertainty of the crisis means social work must begin planning, reflecting and reorientating. The first half of the article contextualises the climate crisis within neoliberal capitalism, whereas the second half proposes alternatives for social work practice that attempt to exist outside these structures. We have argued that social work should have a greater focus on developing an eco-social transition which means engaging with alternative economic systems, intentional communities, community gardens and localism. These approaches can practically espouse the profession's values whilst beginning to conceptualise a response to the climate crisis that operates outside neoliberal capitalism.
引用
收藏
页码:4778 / 4794
页数:17
相关论文
共 72 条
  • [1] Almond R.E.A., 2018, LIVING PLANET REPORT
  • [2] [Anonymous], 2004, TAKKEKORTET WRITTEN
  • [3] Eco-social Work in Action: A Place for Community Gardens
    Bailey, Susan
    Hendrick, Antonia
    Palmer, Marilyn
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN SOCIAL WORK, 2018, 71 (01) : 98 - 110
  • [4] Has the Earth's sixth mass extinction already arrived?
    Barnosky, Anthony D.
    Matzke, Nicholas
    Tomiya, Susumu
    Wogan, Guinevere O. U.
    Swartz, Brian
    Quental, Tiago B.
    Marshall, Charles
    McGuire, Jenny L.
    Lindsey, Emily L.
    Maguire, Kaitlin C.
    Mersey, Ben
    Ferrer, Elizabeth A.
    [J]. NATURE, 2011, 471 (7336) : 51 - 57
  • [5] Collective survival strategies and anti-colonial practice in ecosocial work
    Bell, Finn McLafferty
    Dennis, Mary Kate
    Krings, Amy
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PRACTICE, 2019, 27 (3-4) : 279 - 295
  • [6] Bell K, 2021, ROUT ADV SOC WORK, P58
  • [7] Indigenous perspectives for strengthening social responses to global environmental changes: a response to the social work grand challenge on environmental change
    Billiot, Shanondora
    Beltran, Ramona
    Brown, Danica
    Mitchell, Felicia M.
    Fernandez, Angela
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PRACTICE, 2019, 27 (3-4) : 296 - 316
  • [8] Raising awareness of transformative ecosocial work: Participatory action research with Australian practitioners
    Boetto, Heather
    Bowles, Wendy
    Naerhi, Kati
    Powers, Meredith
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WELFARE, 2020, 29 (04) : 300 - 309
  • [9] Advancing Transformative Eco-social Change: Shifting from Modernist to Holistic Foundations
    Boetto, Heather
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN SOCIAL WORK, 2019, 72 (02) : 139 - 151
  • [10] A Transformative Eco-Social Model: Challenging Modernist Assumptions in Social Work
    Boetto, Heather
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK, 2017, 47 (01) : 48 - 67