Contributions of patriarchal colonial criticism to the family approach in Social Work

We present a set of analysis and deconstruction tools to conceive a Social Work that deals the familiar as a modern colonial patriarchal issue, recovering the politic, theoretic and strategic dimensions of our profession. The key categories of the critcal theories of the colonial and patriarchal iss...

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Autores principales: Hermida , María Eugenia, Bruno, María Luz
Formato: Artículo revista
Lenguaje:Español
Publicado: Instituto de Política, Sociedad e Intervención Social (IPSIS) de la Facultad de Ciencias Sociales (FCS) de la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba (UNC) 2019
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Acceso en línea:https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/ConCienciaSocial/article/view/26133
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Sumario:We present a set of analysis and deconstruction tools to conceive a Social Work that deals the familiar as a modern colonial patriarchal issue, recovering the politic, theoretic and strategic dimensions of our profession. The key categories of the critcal theories of the colonial and patriarchal issues that we propose are intersectionality (Crenshaw, 1991; Platero, 2012) epidermal racial schema (Fanon, 2009) high and low intensity patriarchy (Segato, 2013) and adultcentrism (Vásquez, 2013). Our goal is to reexamine some of the assumptions that undermine the interventions in/with families in Social Work, by recovering those categories, and putting them to use in the here and now of our professional practice, to hear the noises, limitations and potentialities that become invisibilized when we approach the familiar from an eurocentric adult centered, heteronormed prespective.