Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years

In an era of metrification and managerialism there is widespread acceptance that a lack of Aboriginal wellbeing reflects a culture of welfare dependency. But Indigenous wellbeing is more complex than simple equations suggesting “getting off welfare” will achieve betterment. There is no one-size-fits...

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Main Author: Crawford, Frances
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42607
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author Crawford, Frances
author_facet Crawford, Frances
author_sort Crawford, Frances
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description In an era of metrification and managerialism there is widespread acceptance that a lack of Aboriginal wellbeing reflects a culture of welfare dependency. But Indigenous wellbeing is more complex than simple equations suggesting “getting off welfare” will achieve betterment. There is no one-size-fits-all solution to issues of Indigenous disadvantage. Social work literature establishes that moral, social, and political aspects of working the social are in tension with technical and rational aspects. This paper draws on Charles Wright Mills's concept of the “sociological imagination” to render an historical, social-structural, and biographical account of addressing wellbeing within West Australian Kimberley Aboriginal communities since the 1970s. Highlighting the actualities of community as shaped by time, place, and interaction, an argument is made for developing a social work imagination that researches “what is happening here” through ethnographic approaches that consider the intersectioning of history, biographies, and social systems. Without such local knowledge and engagement, effective social policy cannot be enacted from the centre.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-426072017-09-13T16:08:22Z Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years Crawford, Frances reflexive practice practice research social work indigenous knowledge culture sociological imagination In an era of metrification and managerialism there is widespread acceptance that a lack of Aboriginal wellbeing reflects a culture of welfare dependency. But Indigenous wellbeing is more complex than simple equations suggesting “getting off welfare” will achieve betterment. There is no one-size-fits-all solution to issues of Indigenous disadvantage. Social work literature establishes that moral, social, and political aspects of working the social are in tension with technical and rational aspects. This paper draws on Charles Wright Mills's concept of the “sociological imagination” to render an historical, social-structural, and biographical account of addressing wellbeing within West Australian Kimberley Aboriginal communities since the 1970s. Highlighting the actualities of community as shaped by time, place, and interaction, an argument is made for developing a social work imagination that researches “what is happening here” through ethnographic approaches that consider the intersectioning of history, biographies, and social systems. Without such local knowledge and engagement, effective social policy cannot be enacted from the centre. 2011 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42607 10.1080/0312407X.2011.575169 Routledge restricted
spellingShingle reflexive practice
practice research
social work
indigenous knowledge
culture
sociological imagination
Crawford, Frances
Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years
title Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years
title_full Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years
title_fullStr Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years
title_full_unstemmed Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years
title_short Local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: The Kimberley across 40 years
title_sort local regeneration in social work with indigenous peoples: the kimberley across 40 years
topic reflexive practice
practice research
social work
indigenous knowledge
culture
sociological imagination
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42607