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Carving a Professional Identity for Chinese Social Work Shaped by Universalisation, Indigenisation, and Culturalism

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posted on 2025-07-08, 03:23 authored by Q Meng, Mel GrayMel Gray, L Bradt, G Roets
China provides an extremely interesting contemporary case study for the international social work research community, given its questioning of the pertinence of the international definition of social work and stance in relation to the debates surrounding universalisation, internationalisation and indigenisation. This article begins by examining the evolving identity of Chinese social work, grounded as it is in China’s political ideology and socio-cultural values. It then extends the debate on the paradoxical processes of universalisation, internationalisation and indigenisation within the international and Chinese social work discourse in light of the ascendance of Chinese culturalism. Finally, it addresses the impact of these interrelated processes on Chinese social work, as it struggled to adapt to the central government’s political control of the developing profession and social project to train 1.45 million social workers by 2020. It argues that, to avoid the Scylla of escaping into tradition (culturalism) and Charybdis of absorption into the West (universalisation), Chinese social work has become a blend of Western and indigenised knowledge still in search of a unique identity.

Funding

This study was funded by the project of Community-Based Rural Social Work Practice (grant no. NYY221043) in Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications.

Community-Based Rural Social Work Practice in Nanjing University | NYY221043

History

Related Materials

Journal title

British Journal of Social Work

Volume

54

Issue

4

Pagination

1679-1697

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Human and Social Futures

School

School of Humanities, Creative Ind and Social Sci

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