30 min

Dissenting Social Work – a conversation with Paul Michael Garrett Reimagining Social Work

    • Education

In this episode, Ian Hyslop interviews Paul Garrett of  NUI (National University of Ireland, Galway) for the RSW Collective. Paul is a much read and respected theorist and writer in relation to the political context of social work and its implications for education and practice futures.

Dr Garrett  discusses his recent response to the provocative ‘end of social work’ critique offered by Chris  Maylea. While acknowledging the difficulties associated with critical practice he suggests that social work  does not sit outside of the tensions facing the liberal capitalist system globally. Referring to Gramsci’s notion of ‘conjunctures’ he points to climate change, uneven social suffering, the geopolitical unrest which is fuelling a refugee and migrant crisis, and the effects of the Coronavirus pandemic.

Add to this the political resurgence of the populist right and unprecedented for state surveillance and we indeed are living at a challenging cross roads. Garrett argues that we can not choose to live apart from these structuring realities – but that where there is power and reaction there is resistance and solidarity. As workers and social citizens there is, as there always has been, a different world to be won. Dissent is a necessity


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Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rswcollective/message

In this episode, Ian Hyslop interviews Paul Garrett of  NUI (National University of Ireland, Galway) for the RSW Collective. Paul is a much read and respected theorist and writer in relation to the political context of social work and its implications for education and practice futures.

Dr Garrett  discusses his recent response to the provocative ‘end of social work’ critique offered by Chris  Maylea. While acknowledging the difficulties associated with critical practice he suggests that social work  does not sit outside of the tensions facing the liberal capitalist system globally. Referring to Gramsci’s notion of ‘conjunctures’ he points to climate change, uneven social suffering, the geopolitical unrest which is fuelling a refugee and migrant crisis, and the effects of the Coronavirus pandemic.

Add to this the political resurgence of the populist right and unprecedented for state surveillance and we indeed are living at a challenging cross roads. Garrett argues that we can not choose to live apart from these structuring realities – but that where there is power and reaction there is resistance and solidarity. As workers and social citizens there is, as there always has been, a different world to be won. Dissent is a necessity


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Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rswcollective/message

30 min

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