Revisiting Empowerment Through Critical Praxis: Perspectives of Front-Line Workers Supporting Refugee Women Experiencing Gendered Violence in Australia

IF 2.2 3区 社会学 Q1 Social Sciences Affilia-Feminist Inquiry in Social Work Pub Date : 2023-07-09 DOI:10.1177/08861099231186199
Jenny Maturi
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Abstract

This article revisits the concept of empowerment that has underpinned the global movement to address gendered violence. Using a critical praxis lens, the article explores different understandings of empowerment that arose in interviews with front-line domestic violence workers who support refugee and migrant women experiencing gendered violence in Queensland, Australia. Two-thirds of the participants are from refugee and migrant backgrounds themselves. The findings reflect the shift in the service sector from more macro understandings of empowerment, grounded in feminist activism, to more micro understandings. In a context of neoliberal, bureaucratic service delivery, and limited means to address gendered violence that focus on women leaving and legal interventions, empowerment is sometimes viewed in individualistic, therapeutic terms of self-help. There is evidence that domestic violence services, founded on theories of empowerment, are now implicated in the surveillance and risk tracking role of social work as a profession, which has implications for survivor centeredness, agency, and equal participation. However, there is also evidence that front-line workers are aware of structural failings and questioning individualistic conceptions of empowerment amid broader concerns of social justice. Empowerment is viewed as transformative, with possibilities for more collective models aimed at addressing social justice. Outlining implications for feminist scholarship and practice, I suggest empowerment might be revisited by considering the differences between and within groups; structural violence and the consequences of interventions for marginalized groups; collective strategies aimed at broader structural change, such as poverty and race; and by strengthening the capacity of communities to respond to violence.
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通过批判性实践重新审视赋权:支持澳大利亚遭受性别暴力的难民妇女的一线工作者的视角
这篇文章重新审视了赋权的概念,这一概念支撑了全球解决性别暴力问题的运动。文章运用批判性实践的视角,探讨了在采访澳大利亚昆士兰支持遭受性别暴力的难民和移民妇女的一线家庭暴力工作者时产生的对赋权的不同理解。三分之二的参与者本身就有难民和移民背景。研究结果反映了服务业从基于女权主义激进主义的对赋权的宏观理解向微观理解的转变。在新自由主义、官僚服务提供以及以女性离职和法律干预为重点的解决性别暴力的手段有限的背景下,赋权有时被视为个人主义的、治疗性的自助。有证据表明,建立在赋权理论基础上的家庭暴力服务现在与社会工作作为一种职业的监督和风险跟踪作用有关,这对以幸存者为中心、代理和平等参与有影响。然而,也有证据表明,一线工作者意识到了结构性缺陷,并在更广泛的社会正义问题中质疑个人主义的赋权观念。赋权被视为变革性的,有可能建立更多旨在解决社会正义问题的集体模式。概述了对女权主义学术和实践的影响,我建议可以通过考虑群体之间和群体内部的差异来重新审视赋权;结构性暴力和干预措施对边缘化群体的影响;旨在进行更广泛的结构变革的集体战略,例如贫困和种族问题;以及通过加强社区应对暴力的能力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
9.10%
发文量
63
期刊介绍: Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work is dedicated to the discussion and development of feminist values, theories, and knowledge as they relate to social work and social welfare research, education, and practice. The intent of Affilia is to bring insight and knowledge to the task of eliminating discrimination and oppression, especially with respect to gender, race, ethnicity, class, age, disability, and sexual and affectional preference.
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