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Social workers acknowledge that we live in extra-ordinary times of uncertainty, disruption to the ‘business as usual’ and growing social, cultural, political, economic and environmental disparities. This unit equips you with intersectional analysis skills, theoretical knowledge and practice skills to understand, confront and respond to the multiple impacts of social injustice and human rights neglect and abuses. The unit begins by examining the contested nature of contemporary life and how history has shaped how social work has responded to social, cultural, environmental, economic and political problems. Through the prism of diverse knowledge relevant to the Australian context including First Nations perspectives and international frameworks such as the United Nations this unit examines the definitions and practices of social sustainability, social innovation and regenerative social work practice. This unit also uses intersectional and decolonising understandings of social work to develop students capacity to examine global and local contexts and identify how a social work response is ethically formulated and consistently aligned to sustainable and regenerative social goals. You can expect to engage with international and local case studies to decolonise your understandings of social sustainability, social innovation and regenerative practice and their relevance to contemporary social work. You can also expect to explore how to meaningfully engage with individuals, communities, and systems to trigger change focused on social sustainability and regeneration. Learning processes in this unit include self and collaborative critical reflection, mutual enquiry, group work, role plays, Yarning and dialogical discussions. |
| | | | | Intended Learning Outcomes |
| | | | | As per the Assessment and Results Policy 1.3, your results will reflect your achievement against specified learning outcomes. On completion of this unit, you will be able to: |
| | | | | | | | | Use intersectional analysis to reveal how discrimination, oppression, exploitation and inequality are maintained in social policies, systems and institutions. | | Identify how locally relevant social injustice and human rights issues are linked to global social sustainability goals. | | Identify contemporary elements of grounded, committed and principled ethical social work activism that are proven to promote social sustainability. | | Distinguish social innovation and sustainability principles, protocols, processes and outcomes that support the decolonisation agenda through using actual and hypothetical case studies. | |
Analyse the potential for contemporary social policy interventions to contribute to social sustainability goals that are linked to a decolonising agenda. |
| | | | | | | | | | | | REQUISITE TYPE | REQUISITES | Pre-requisite | 200 credit points from the Bachelor of Social Work with Honours
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| | | | | Alterations as a result of student feedback |
| | | | | This unit is subject to regular evaluation through the UTAS online student feedback system. |
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