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Indigenization, Indigenous social work and decolonization: mapping the theoretical terrain

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posted on 2025-05-08, 15:52 authored by Marilyn GrayMarilyn Gray, Tiani Hetherington
This opening chapter attempts to map the complex theoretical terrain of Indigenous social work, a term used to describe First Nations (in North America) or Aboriginal (in Australia) social work and seen by people in North America and Australia and New Zealand as specific to a form of practice with minority Indigenous populations in mainly Western societies. Embracing Indigenous social work means being comfortable with uncertainty and diversity rather than attempting to condense complex histories and cultures into measurable units of analysis. Indigenous social work is far more comfortable with, and deals better with, uncertainty and complexity than Western social work.

History

Source title

Decolonizing Social Work

Pagination

25-41

Publisher

Ashgate

Place published

Farnham, UK

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Humanities and Social Science

Rights statement

Reprinted from ‘Indigenization, Indigenous Social Work and Decolonization: Mapping the theoretical terrain’, in Decolonizing Social Work ed. Mel Gray, John Coates, Michael Yellow Bird & Tiani Hetherington (Farnham: Ashgate, 2013), pp. 25-41. Copyright © 2013.

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