ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic represents a critical juncture in the development of the welfare state affirming its importance for its citizens’ economic, health and wellbeing, and safety, especially for its most vulnerable populations. It demonstrated that the crisis preparedness that is crucial for an effective protection of its citizens, the ultimate purpose of the welfare state, unquestionably exceeds the narrow horizon of a corporatised welfare industry with its singular focus on the maximisation of profit for the elites and cost containment for the government. Social workers need to engage with the contradictions and tensions that spring from underfunded welfare services and engage in the political struggle over a well-resourced welfare state.

Contributors to this book take on this challenge. By tracing the various contradictions of the pandemic, the contributors reflect on new ways of thinking about welfare by exploring what to keep, what to challenge and what to change. By highlighting important challenges for a social justice-focused response as well as exploring the many challenges exposed by the pandemic facing social work for the coming decades, contributors critically outline pathways in social work that might contribute to the shaping of a less cruel and more capable welfare state. Using case-studies from Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australia, Italy, Slovenia, Estonia, Sweden, Spain, South Africa, Canada, Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe, China and the United States, the book features 19 chapters by leading experts.

This book will be of interest to all social work scholars, students and practitioners, as well as those working in social policy and health more broadly.

chapter 2|13 pages

Communovirus

Ethical community for social work in a ‘post’-COVID world

chapter 5|12 pages

Social work in the post-COVID state

Emancipatory or the long arm of the control and coercion

chapter 6|12 pages

The convergence between neoliberalism and digital technology

Awakening individual and societal consciousness for a sustainable, resilient and just post-pandemic world

chapter 8|13 pages

Feminist response to COVID-19

Is it time for feminist social policies?

chapter 9|13 pages

Disrupting masculinism in public policy responses to COVID-19

Unmasking the gendered dimensions of the pandemic

chapter 10|11 pages

Re-imagining the place for social work in the post-pandemic welfare

Lessons from the Italian experience

chapter 11|12 pages

More trouble in a welfare paradise

Sweden's problematic welfare policy and practice response to the pandemic

chapter 13|10 pages

Grassroots solidarity in social work

Strengthening the welfare state beyond COVID-19 through social impact in the field of child abuse

chapter 15|12 pages

Examining China's response to the COVID-19 pandemic

Reflections of social workers from the field

chapter 17|13 pages

A moment of fuzziness

Connections between shifting notions of ‘home’ and welfare arrangements ‘back home’ for Black Zimbabwean migrants living under COVID-19 travel restrictions in Australia

chapter 18|10 pages

COVID in Black Australia

chapter 19|8 pages

COVID-19 and the welfare state

Social work's practice and policy