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Rethinking empowerment: a postmodern reappraisal for emancipatory practice

journal contribution
posted on 2002-03-01, 00:00 authored by Bob PeaseBob Pease
This article is concerned with the implications of the postmodern challenge to critical theory for the practice of empowerment. How do we conceptualize empowerment from a postmodern perspective? It is argued that the modernist concept of power upon which empowerment rests, can have unintended disempowering effects. By conceptualizing power as a commodity, identities are forced into a powerful–powerless dualism which does not always do justice to diverse experiences. Thus we can sometimes contribute to dominance in spite of our liberatory intentions. It is argued that social workers need to become more aware of the self-disciplining and self-regulatory processes involved in professional work to address the social relations of power embedded in professional practices. Foucault's analysis of how marginalized knowledges are affected by dominant cultural practices suggests a redefining of empowerment as the insurrection of subjugated knowledge. The implications of this redefinition for practice is illustrated by reference to work with indigenous people in Australia.

History

Journal

British journal of social work

Volume

32

Issue

2

Pagination

135 - 147

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Location

London, England

ISSN

0045-3102

eISSN

1468-263X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2002,Oxford University Press

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