社会工作的政治性-Social Work as a Moral and Political Practice
社会工作的政治性-Social Work as a Moral and Political Practice
社会工作的政治性-Social Work as a Moral and Political Practice
i s w
Sage Publications: Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore and Washington DC
DOI: 10.1177/0020872808102064
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
288 International Social Work volume 52(3)
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
Chu et al.: Moral and political practice 289
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
290 International Social Work volume 52(3)
workers must abide by their own moral code. How they can do so
without domination and imposition, particularly when a client’s values
differ, is an issue that requires serious attention.
To take a moral approach to social work, its practitioners must bear
in mind the following questions: How can we reach an agreement with
our clients on their history and feelings? How have our own social
positions, cultural traditions, ideologies, values and beliefs distorted
our mutual understanding? How do the larger organizational and social
contexts of our relationships with our clients limit our understanding
of each other and hence the implications of our actions? And, finally,
when we have achieved a shared understanding, how do we ensure that
our intervention is not only a product of this understanding but also
socially just? The Global Standards are relevant here. The principles
upheld in the Standards reflect the dual role of social work: to pursue
social justice and to safeguard individual well-being. In order to bal-
ance these concerns, the social worker must bear in mind the effects of
the socio-political and cultural context.
To answer the questions listed above requires both technical exper-
tise and a moral appreciation of what constitutes ‘the good’ for a partic-
ular client in an individual and collective context. This appreciation is
acquired through a process of dialogue and critical self-reflection. The
claims of personal well-being must be balanced against those of social
justice. Goals must be pursued not only on an individual basis but in a
collective context in which social harmony and stability are given due
consideration without sacrificing human rights and individual well-
being. Social workers need a dynamic and deep understanding of their
clients’ unique problems, rather than general guidelines. A humanis-
tic moral practice demands more than detached cognitive engagement.
It will not leave the practitioner untouched. It requires social workers
to be empathetic sharers in human suffering, to be capable of putting
themselves in another’s position, and to communicate with compas-
sion. Social workers must view their clients and their selves as whole
people with souls, minds and lives that are situated in specific con-
texts and histories, as both individuals and communal beings. With a
holistic and engaged understanding, social workers are more likely to
identify with their clients’ predicaments. Such an understanding can-
not exist separately from critical self-reflection, moral consciousness,
and responsiveness (Taylor and White, 2001). Social work practice
is distinguished from other professional practices because it is deeply
embedded in humanistic values. Social work practitioners cannot be
technocrats, they must be moral actors.
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
Chu et al.: Moral and political practice 291
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
292 International Social Work volume 52(3)
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
Chu et al.: Moral and political practice 293
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
294 International Social Work volume 52(3)
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
Chu et al.: Moral and political practice 295
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
296 International Social Work volume 52(3)
Conclusion
We have tried to convey the urgent need for international social work
bodies to re-examine the moral and political bases of social work prac-
tice because we have witnessed them withering in developed countries
in the West. As these countries have served as our reference, we need
to re-evaluate the current scene. Social justice and human dignity are
two core values of social work, which we neglect at our peril.
Our counterparts in the USA and the UK have eroded their value
bases by developing therapeutic and managerial orientations. Although
the interpretation of the core value of social justice may vary as a result
of the cultural context, we still maintain that, if social work is going to
honour its historical mission, we have to reclaim its moral and political
bases.
References
Addams, J. (1926) ‘How Much Social Work Can a Community Afford: From the Ethical
Point of View’, Proceedings of the National Conference of Social Work 108–13.
Biestek, F. (1957) The Casework Relationship. New York: Allen and Unwin.
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
Chu et al.: Moral and political practice 297
Clark, C. (2006) ‘Moral Character in Social Work’, British Journal of Social Work
36: 75–89.
DePoy, E., A. Hartman and D. Haslett (1999) ‘Critical Action Research: A Model for
Social Work Knowing’, Social Work 44(6): 560–9.
Ehrenreich, J. (1985) The Altruistic Imagination: A History of Social Work and Social
Policy in United States. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Epstein, L. (1999) ‘The Culture of Social Work’, in A.S. Chambon, A. Irving and
L. Epstein (eds) Reading Foucault for Social Work, pp. 3–26. New York: Columbia
University Press.
Flexner, A. ([1915] 2001) ‘Is Social Work a Profession?’, paper presented at the National
Conference of Charities and Correction (1915), reprinted in Research on Social Work
Practice 1(2): 152–65.
Fook, J. (2002) Social Work: Critical Theory and Practice. London: Sage.
George, J. (1999) ‘Conceptual Muddle, Practical Dilemma: Human Rights, Social Devel-
opment and Social Work Education’, International Social Work 42(1): 15–26.
Gray, M. (2005) ‘Dilemmas of International Social Work: Paradoxical Processes in
Indigenisation, Universalism and Imperialism’, International Journal of Social Welfare
14: 231–8.
Gray, M. and J. Fook (2004) ‘The Quest for a Universal Social Work: Some Issues and
Implications’, Social Work Education 23(5): 625–44.
Habermas, J. (1984) The Theory of Communicative Action. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Habermas, J. (1999) Between Facts and Norms (trans. W. Rehg). Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press.
Hanisch, C. (1971) ‘The Personal is Political’, in J. Agel (ed.) The Radical Therapist.
New York: Ballantine.
Hartman, A. (1993) ‘The Professional is Political’, Social Work 38(4): 365.
Howe, D. (1992) An Introduction to Social Work Theories: Making Sense in Practice.
Aldershot: Ashgate.
Miehls, D. and K. Moffatt (2000) ‘Constructing Social Work Identity Based on Reflexive
Self’, British Journal of Social Work 30: 339–48.
Mohan, B. (1995) ‘Reinventing the Mission’, New Global Development: Journal of Inter-
national and Comparative Social Welfare 11: 74–8.
Mullay, R. (1997) Structural Social Work: Ideology, Theory and Practice. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Rawls, J. (1971) A Theory of Justice. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Reid, N.P. and P.R. Popple, eds (1992) The Moral Purposes of Social Work: The
Character and Intention of a Profession. Chicago, IL: Nelson-Hall.
Reisch, M. (2002) ‘Defining Social Justice in a Socially Unjust World’, Families in
Society 83(4): 343–54.
Sachs, J. and F. Newdom (1999) Clinical Work and Social Action: An Integrative
Approach. New York: The Haworth Press.
Schon, D. (1983) The Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in Action. New
York: Basic Books.
Sewpaul, V. and D. Jones (2004) ‘Global Standard for Social Work Education and Train-
ing’, Social Work Education 23(5): 493–513.
Simpkin, M. (1983) Trapped within Welfare: Surviving Social Work. London:
Macmillan.
Specht, H. and M. Courtney (1994) Unfaithful Angels: How Social Work Has Abandoned
Its Mission. New York: The Free Press.
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015
298 International Social Work volume 52(3)
Downloaded from isw.sagepub.com at NORTH DAKOTA STATE UNIV LIB on June 3, 2015