ABSTRACT

Social work as a profession and academic discipline has long centered women and issues of concern to women, such as reproductive rights, labor rights, equal rights, violence and poverty. In fact, the social work profession was started by and maintained in large part by women and has been home to several generations of feminists starting with recognized first wave feminists. This wide-ranging volume both maps the contemporary landscape of feminist social work research, and offers a deep engagement with critical and third wave feminisms in social work research.

Showcasing the breadth and depth of exemplary social work feminist research, the editors argue that social work’s unique focus on praxis, daily proximities to privilege and oppression, concern with social change and engagement with participatory forms of inquiry place social workers in a unique position to both learn from and contribute to broader social science and humanities discourse associated with feminist research. The authors attend here to their specific claims of feminisms, articulate deep engagement with theory, address the problematic use of binaries, and engage with issues associated with methods that are consistently of interest to feminist researchers, such as power and authority, ethics, reflexivity, praxis and difference.

Comprehensive and containing an international selection of contributions, Feminisms in Social Work Research is an important reference for all social work researchers with an interest in critical perspectives.

section |50 pages

Feminist Claims in Social Work Research

chapter |15 pages

Doing Profeminist Research with Men in Social Work

Reflections on Epistemology, Methodology, and Politics

section |68 pages

Theory in Research

chapter |21 pages

Operationalizing Intersectionality in Feminist Social Work Research

Reflections and Techniques from Research with Equity-Seeking Groups

chapter |15 pages

Myths and Monsters

Challenging Assumptions of Poor Working-Class Motherhood through Feminist Research

section |52 pages

Treatment of Binaries in Research

chapter |17 pages

Feminist Research in the Absence of Gender

Exploring Intersubjectivity in Practice, Purpose, and Representation

chapter |16 pages

Precarious Positioning

Tensions in Doing Siiqqee Feminist Social Work Research

chapter |17 pages

Troubling the Binary

A Critical Look at the Dualistic Construction of Quantitative/Qualitative Methods in Feminist Social Work Research