Prikaz objav z oznako austerity. Pokaži vse objave
Prikaz objav z oznako austerity. Pokaži vse objave

četrtek, 24. oktober 2019

The Breakthrough of the Social


 

Dubrovnik Manifesto 2019[1][2]

 

The Necessity of the Social


In September 2019, over one hundred people active in social work praxis gathered in Dubrovnik to explore some of the most urgent current challenges and to reassert and reinstate social work. This manifesto, discussed before, during, and after the event, is our collective statement on the importance of social work praxis in the contemporary context.

Facing an increasing brutalisation of society that goes hand in hand with the destruction of welfare systems, encountering old and new forms of structural and concrete acts of violence, we set out to explore how we can contribute to re-emphasise and revive the critical tradition of social work, and reinforce solidarity with those who are oppressed, at-risk and vulnerable.

After decades of a diminished social, in a neo-liberal conjuncture that has privileged the economic and neglected, marginalised, and thoroughly downgraded the social dimension as the basis of our existence, there is an urgent need for the breakthrough of a brand-new social, analogous to the one superseding classic liberalism at the end of the 19th century in the Global North.

Social work has not only to be a part of this breakthrough, and would be strengthened by this emergence, enabled to survive as an essential feature of society –it also needs to play an active role in bringing it to fruition.

In order to do so we have to defy notions of ‘professional neutrality’, reclaim social work as a community-oriented, relationship-based activity that goes far beyond academia, and build strong coalitions of workers, academics, service users, movement activists, trades’ unionists and everybody else working towards social justice.

Radical Social Transformations


We are living through yet another great transformation. The transformation of the future will be radical – whether we give up and merely observe the collapse of civilisation, or if we try to bring about a more socially just world:  based on the common good and on the values of care; of living together with profound awareness of both our vulnerability and strengths as individuals and as a society. We need to actively preserve what is good, including the natural world and the eco-system, and radically change that which does not work.

Globalisation, digitalisation, forced migration, demographic changes, a changing division of labour, etc., have exposed us, in different ways, to unprecedented, and sometimes unseen, risks that are greatest for those who are excluded from privileges and experience exploitation, discrimination and poverty. The radical transformation has also created numerous new opportunities in terms of communications, mobility, diversity, productive capacities and culture. Yet we crave for security (both social and physical) and fear violence, which keeps emerging in new forms and with a growing intensity.

The natural and political dimensions of the catastrophe merge into one through global warming, caused by fossil capitalism and the rush to turn natural resources into profit. They are epitomised by migration, including migration forced as a result of conflicts, climate change and economic misery; by fear exploited by authoritarianism (fuelled by fundamentalisms of many different kinds), by increasing inequality created by neo-liberal regimes, and by the removal of liberties and freedom (gentrification for the rich – immobility for the poor), enforced hatred and discrimination towards all who do not conform to what is set as the male, white, heterosexual norm; growing exploitation through new forms of work in the so-called gig economy; and an expanded precariat, with deep psychological and social consequences, making human existence precarious indeed.

Yet, there have been important developments towards an inclusive society. The rights of people with disabilities and children have been clearly stated, enshrined in global Conventions, albeit with some hiccups and never fully implemented in practice. Deinstitutionalisation and long-term care have been introduced, albeit not without obstacles, contributing to a re-evaluation of old age (old is good), childhood, madness and disability.

New social movements keep arising desiring a better, more dignified, life connecting the grassroots and global scales. New, alternative, forms of economic relations are being developed and a new kind of urban revolution seems to be imminent, not least in the Fearless cities movements. Trades’ unions, including trades’ unions of social workers, need to be established where they do not exist and strengthened where they do, and to adapt to new forms of work and to advocate for measures to benefit the whole of society. New forms of fighting racism, sexism and other forms of discrimination and fighting the global, life-threatening, climate emergency are emerging, calling for no less than a radical system change!

Although the age of austerity seems to be waning, what post-austerity will look like is still under construction.

Wisdom of Social Work Interfaces


To steer the transformation toward human solutions, practical wisdom is needed. The role of social work is to do just that; furthermore, it has to safeguard and promote marginalised and disrespected local or indigenous knowledge so it withstands and has impact on the global rule of abstract schemes. Ordinary everyday life – the Life World – should become the basic and pragmatic criterion of policy change and adaptations – ensuring the sovereignty of people.

Besides the unalienable mandate of social work to provide the everyday, users’, perspective on life and the world, the strength of social work lies in bringing together unseemly combinations of knowledge and logics of action. The major sources of social work action syntheses are ethics, organisation and politics. There is the need to know what is the right thing to do, how to organise the transition and where to obtain the power to do it.

Social work’s Ethics of Inclusion and imperative of non-exclusion provide the humanist synthesis of the broken dialectics of Reason/ Unreason. To follow its ethical imperatives, forms of self-management (rather than social service managementshould be soughtSocial work engagement in politics needs to stem from popular activism and an intersectional understanding and way of working, mobilising and struggling together, acknowledging and seeking understanding of existing differences and constructively using them as a collective force for change.

The practical power of social work lies in its transversal, inter-disciplinary, approach and inter-sectoral position. The Welfare State and Welfare Society needs to be reinvented on the grounds of a critical evaluation of the post-socialist (with post-austerity in mind) syntheses (South East European, Global East, and Global South) and social work’s role in the bottom-up construction of progressive social policies asserted.

Social work has to create productive links with other human disciplines and sectors. In education, social work can contribute to learning in action and provide the solutions to schooling problems (bullying, teacher protection, supporting teachers in building solidarity). In healthcare, constantly in relation to social work, it can bestow the importance of the user’s perspective, involvement and participation leading to an holistic approach to health and well-being, while still keeping existing specific needs in mind. In both challenging and strengthening the legal frame and combining it with social processes (in the law and administration), it can counter debasing practices and bureaucratisation with empowering practices and advocacy. 

Practical Utopias (Challenges for Social Work)


Social work is a practical, everyday Utopia; it is always about becoming, searching for a better place, more human and more social. It has to have a (utopian) sense of desire – be it about changing for the better or conserving what is good and it has to live up to the dictum that “action is the sole medium of expression for ethics”.  Throughout its history, social work has developed many productive tools, which need to be re-strengthened and re-loaded, with new alternatives sought and built. Social work’s classic tools and stories must be joined by new ones and governed by the notion of users’ emancipation and the emancipation of society as such.

Comparative social work should enable the transfer and translation of good practices, not only across diverse national and local contexts, but also over the life-cycle in working with children and youth, older people, families and groups facing multiple challengeswith people with diverse labels – poverty, delinquency, disability, challenging mental health concerns and so on. An intersectional approach should focus on the inter-relationship between gender, age, ‘race’, class, sexuality, and disability. It needs to focus on building solidarity and alliances with networks and self-organisation of marginalised groups such as LGBTQ-identified persons, refugees and migrants, homeless people, and initiatives and campaigns such as “Me too”, “Me two”, “blacklivesmatter” and many more.  

Deinstitutionalisation, which has, in recent decades, become a global platform, needs an overview and a context, an appreciation of its achievements, obstacles and traps and a vision how to handle it as a techne and an ethical imperative. Simultaneously, it has to be sensitive to, and in a polemical relation with, the remaining elements of oppression, detention, constraint, punishment and even torture in the care system and beyond. Long-term care, which aspires to become a universal provision, is a challenge per se and needs to be consistently and radically implemented as such, to connect with other types of existing provision in order to become universally available. Attention needs to be given to instances of increased power of service users (e.g. shared decision-making, co-managers, co-trainers and co-researchers) and more collaborative ways of working on the basis of self-determination and self-advocacy need to be realised.

There are new areas social work is entering into (such as green social work) and new means of performing social work (such as through social media and new technologies).  There is a constant struggle between social work and fragmenting governance and management. In the past decades social work has been under attack from ‘proceduralism’ and projectisation, even if social work has invented practical solutions to resolve the formal contradictions between protection (care) and freedom.

Increasing atomisation and individualisation of a practice based solely on individual social work, calls for a reinvention of community social work and action (also to challenge the rise of religious fundamentalisms and authoritarian neoliberalisms).

The challenge for social work today is to build a vision that will guide us through new areas, foster and preserve freedoms based on (social) security, dealing simultaneously and comprehensively with diverse adversity and enabling people (both professionals and users) to address life issues in a transversal and intersectional manner. In this way, social work will enable people to live together with minimum exclusion and maximum availability of support for personal and communal projects, without fearing the consequences of oppression and without becoming prey to authoritarian power.

Staying neutral is not an option. Working passionately and fearlessly towards turning our social utopias into the reality of a good life for all is what is needed today!



[1] The manifesto is based on ideas for the conference The Breakthrough of the Social: Practical Utopias, Wisdom and Radical Transformations – Social Work @IUC: Lessons Learned and Future Challenges; held at Inter-University Centre in Dubrovnik, 2–6 September 2019, organised by the IUC ‘School of Social Work Theory and Practice’.
[2] This is the last version. Please ignore the previous.

sreda, 3. avgust 2016

Social Work Emerging from Crisis



[This blog is a concluding part of  previous blogs published in April (sorry for this omission). It is also conclusion of the summarising article on the last year conference at IUC in Dubrovnik Ethics of Inclusion: The Role of Social Work in Social Transformation and Innovation, now published in the Dialogue in Praxis special issue.]


We have explored the presupposed triangle of crisis – ethics, movements and innovation - on various strata of existence. How they combine is parallel but different and autonomous in its content and dynamics diverse planes. The patterns on diverse planes may be in dissonance or resonate with each other. Empowerment in one to one social work, can be, for example, annulled by organisational control, or by disempowering policies. Or, it may confirm and strengthen the policies that give power to the people. Events on more abstract strata have a vector effect on more concrete ones, but also vice versa – and especially the latter route must be explored for social work programme for the future.

A common pattern resonating across the strata is that the answers to the questions posed by crisis can be sought in ethics and by responses through people coming together and acting in common interest. Rights and community are the keywords and have to be understood as a double entity. While the state was seen in the past as the provider and guarantor of rights, the community is now seen as the site where these should be enacted, but also as autonomous places of constituting rights and providing responses to people’s needs. These are the communities to be created by movements among the people. In other words, crisis can be resolved on different levels by different means, but a strong ethical stance and collaboration between the people is needed. Ethics should be based on the imperative of non-exclusion, and through collaboration on the ethics of inclusion.

What happens in the life-world should be the benchmark and the basis of social work and how successful it is. It is also a measure of our existence and the final end of the use of power we have, the essence of our sovereignty. Yet, how we live, and also how we do social work, is the subject to forces extraneous to it. No matter how virtual they are, they have an impact on our lives.

Social work can be seen as a profession embedded in the life-world but also a mediator between the life-world and other strata of existence. The life-world is both its starting point but also its destination: the journey through other strata must be useful in the actual world we live.

Social work has the potential to generate power by recombining forces imminent in the life-world. It can be done by getting people together in order to surmount common difficulties, distress and obstacles, but also by enabling to express their desires, what they like and what they dislike and what they enjoy and fear, to do what they need and want and decline what they do not want to do. Social work is, however, also a vehicle of power generated extraneously to the life-world and should be able not only to provide its useful function in the life-world but also let the expression of the people influence the events on more abstract levels.

Methods and procedures are usually seen as a way of moulding and adapting to abstract realities (Kafka). Such use of them must be avoided by social work. Instead they must be used to enable people to be inscribed in the registers of distribution of resources, to receive means they are entitled to (in social policy, social security), to secure their rights and promote their desires. Instead of ceremonies of degradation (Garfinkel), social work procedures must be celebrations of promotion and conveyers of empowerment in order to influence general decisions and provide power to enable action in the life-world.

The organisation of social work should be there to serve the people, their needs and enable them to live better and have more power (and not the other way around where people serve organisations). The intention of such organisation should be to bring people together and enable them to communicate, interact, deal with and liaise with other such organisations, communities and groups. Thus, the organisation should be transparent, participatory, self-managed and open. It should not be exclusive nor excluding.

Social policy and service provision must similarly be in the hands of service users, not merely through representation but through common projects, direct action and community organisation. It must be rights-based, grounded in the universal rights that would not allow exclusion and poverty. Modern technology and social work methods allow that this universalistic right can be transformed into singularised achievements, so that a person’s desires become the measure of social policy. It requires the double action of people coming together to achieve what they want and of negotiating changes in institutions. The latter must be in the direction of conserving and promoting the right to social security and social safety (universal income, long-term care), of defending people from exploitation and of creating autonomy through community-based self-sustainable initiatives.

Social work should polemically challenge poisonous knowledge and cultures of exclusion. It must foster dialogue about the past, the present and the future, across diverse cultures and groups. It must truly embrace the ideal of expertise by experience and combine theory, research and active participation of everybody involved. It must include those hitherto excluded, hidden knowledge and replace elitist axioms with experience-based and pragmatic solutions.

Social work should actively resist any politics that lead to exclusion, even if it is only by effect. Its politico-ethical stance should be against any kind of oppression and degradation. It should endow any developments towards community-based planetary citizenship. It has to connect to new popular movements, be a companion in the struggle and a witness of suffering. It must use the power invested in social work to the ends of the people. As stated, it should bring social work to level of people’s lived experience and raise it up to all sorts of occasions.

The pyramid of power is upside-down: with a lot of power in the top layers of abstract schemes of society and almost none in the concrete world of social work service users. Social work should seek out and challenge the inconsistencies of the structure and its dissonances, in order to overturn it. It should seek ways to deliver power to the people, using its methods to give voice to service users and not to keep them quiet; using its procedures to inscribe their will into the fabric of the organisation, and organise people to take care of themselves, producing knowledge useful in everyday life, establishing universal rights to enable change and restore humanity – to the people and to the society.