Global crises and hopefulness in community practice?

IF 1.5 Q2 SOCIAL WORK Journal of Community Practice Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/10705422.2023.2196967
Deborah Adams, Mary L. Ohmer, Amy Mendenhall, Michelle Mohr Carney
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Abstract

In this first issue of the Journal of Community Practice (JCP) for 2023, we find it challenging to write an editorial that balances hopefulness for the future while also looking realistically at the wide range of current global crises. The crises are numerous, and we risk the appearance of minimizing those we do not name here. We know that they all need and deserve our editorial, scholarly, and professional attention. In this editorial, we focus on three global crises that are among those with the most urgent need for community practice in 2023. Here we discuss natural disasters, war, and the related dislocation of families and communities; climate change and the critical need for renewable energy; and poverty. We believe that teaching/learning, research, and social action in these crises areas need to be informed by a realistic view of the challenges ahead as well as examples of recent scientific and social breakthroughs that may help us balance the need for continued social change with something akin to cautious optimism about the future of our work with the people and communities of the world. In this editorial, we also offer three related thoughts on community practice in times of social and economic crises. First, these crises are negatively affecting individuals, families, communities, and nations in increasingly interrelated ways throughout the world. We are not able to successfully respond to social and economic crises as though the challenges we face are bound by local, regional, or national borders. Second, crises like those we highlight here require social workers and allies from related fields who have the education and training needed to respond effectively at all levels of practice. None of the serious social and economic challenges in the world today can be resolved exclusively at the individual and family levels. Our challenges require community practice, policy practice, and research to guide needed structural changes. Third, we will be better equipped to continue the work of averting and responding to crises if we keep our eyes open to research breakthroughs and examples of positive social change from a wide range of disciplines. While it will not help to create a sense of false hope or willfully ignore emerging threats to social wellbeing, the importance of balancing our view of what is wrong with the world and what is going well in the world is essential to the future of community practice. Without such a balanced view we risk not being able to recruit new generations of the best and the brightest to seemingly “grim” professions and condemning those currently in the field to burnout, cynicism, and ultimately abandoning the fight for social justice. JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PRACTICE 2023, VOL. 31, NO. 1, 1–10 https://doi.org/10.1080/10705422.2023.2196967
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全球危机和社区实践中的希望?
在2023年的第一期《社区实践杂志》(JCP)中,我们发现写一篇社论很有挑战性,既要平衡对未来的希望,又要现实地看待当前广泛的全球危机。危机很多,我们冒着将那些我们在这里没有提到的危机最小化的风险。我们知道他们都需要并值得我们在编辑、学术和专业方面给予关注。在这篇社论中,我们重点关注三场全球危机,它们是2023年最迫切需要社区实践的危机之一。在这里,我们讨论自然灾害、战争以及相关的家庭和社区错位;气候变化和对可再生能源的迫切需求;以及贫困。我们认为,这些危机领域的教学/学习、研究和社会行动需要从对未来挑战的现实看法以及最近科学和社会突破的例子中获得信息,这些突破可能有助于我们在持续社会变革的需求与对我们与世界人民和社区合作的未来持谨慎乐观态度之间取得平衡。在这篇社论中,我们还就社会和经济危机时期的社区实践提出了三点相关的思考。首先,这些危机正在以越来越相互关联的方式对世界各地的个人、家庭、社区和国家产生负面影响。我们无法成功应对社会和经济危机,就好像我们面临的挑战受到地方、区域或国家边界的限制一样。其次,像我们在这里强调的那样的危机需要来自相关领域的社会工作者和盟友,他们接受必要的教育和培训,以便在各级实践中有效应对。当今世界上任何严重的社会和经济挑战都不能完全在个人和家庭层面解决。我们的挑战需要社区实践、政策实践和研究来指导所需的结构变革。第三,如果我们关注来自广泛学科的研究突破和积极社会变革的例子,我们将更有能力继续避免和应对危机。虽然这无助于制造虚假的希望感或故意忽视对社会福祉的新威胁,但平衡我们对世界问题和世界进展的看法对社区实践的未来至关重要。如果没有这样一个平衡的观点,我们就有可能无法招募新一代最优秀和最聪明的人从事看似“严峻”的职业,并谴责目前从事这一领域的人精疲力竭、愤世嫉俗,最终放弃社会正义的斗争。《2023年社区实践杂志》,第31卷,第1期,第1-10页https://doi.org/10.1080/10705422.2023.2196967
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
18.20%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: The Journal of Community Practice is an interdisciplinary journal grounded in social work. It is designed to provide a forum for community practice, including community organizing, planning, social administration, organizational development, community development, and social change. The journal contributes to the advancement of knowledge related to numerous disciplines, including social work and the social sciences, urban planning, social and economic development, community organizing, policy analysis, urban and rural sociology, community health, public administration, and nonprofit management. As a forum for authors and a resource for readers, this journal makes an invaluable contribution to the community"s conceptualization, applications, and practice.
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