Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://openlibrary-repo.ecampusontario.ca/jspui/handle/123456789/2466
Title: The Colonial Mirror : Immigration, Inequality & Colonialism
Authors: Carranza, Mirna
Carranza, Mirna
Shah, Haleemah
Keywords: Decoloniality
Coloniality
Eurocentrism
Migration
Social Work
Issue Date: 1-Sep-2024
Publisher: McMaster
Abstract: This book explores the history of social work with newcomers through the lens of coloniality, which articulates what has been intentionally silenced, missed and how exclusion has been reproduced. This is especially pertinent to move towards the decolonization of education. Given Social work’s implication in the reproduction of the colonial encounter, the profession is in a unique position to shift its discourse and praxis. The social work relationships are predicated on the “knower” and the “known”, similar to the rescuer or hero narratives. In the past, therapeutic spaces have been visibly white and over time, this whiteness has been embedded in these relations- so as faces change, we can remain beholden to history. Agency and resiliency is not discussed, outside of the helper/helpee relationship, meaning that social work spaces often mirror colonial relations. The goal of this book is to understand how families, as a whole and the individual members, negotiate their placement on the Colonial Grid through resettlement in Canada. This is achieved by traversing through the history of social work and migration, to engage with the complicity of the profession of producing and reinforcing the Other. Of key importance is how Canadians, including social workers have been conditioned to understand immigration as “moving up”, “the search for a better life” and Canada as “provider and safe haven”, but most importantly the implication in fostering assimilation.
URI: https://openlibrary-repo.ecampusontario.ca/jspui/handle/123456789/2466
Other Identifiers: 5d6cfe88-1da2-4bf7-9c71-0e22f8badd4c
Appears in Collections:Ontario OER Collection



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