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Encouraging critical reflections on privilege in social work and the human services

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journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Bob PeaseBob Pease
Critical reflection is promoted by many progressive social work writers as a process for facilitating practitioners' capacity to reflect upon their complicity in dominant power relations. However. the critical social work literature tends to focus attention on those who are disadvantaged. oppressed and excluded. Those who are privileged in relation to gender. class. race and sexuality etc are often ignored. Given that the flipside of oppression and social exclusion is privilege. the lack of critical reflection on the privileged side of social  divisions allows members of dominant groups to reinforce their dominance. This article interrogates the concept of privilege and examines how it is internalised in the psyches of members of dominant groups. After exploring the potential to undo privilege from within. the article encourages social work educators to engage in critical reflections about privilege when teaching social work students about social injustice and oppression.

History

Journal

Practice reflexions

Volume

1

Pagination

15-26

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1834-3635

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2006, Practice reflexions

Issue

1

Publisher

Australian Institute of Welfare and Community Workers