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Understanding Power and PowerlessnessTowards a Framework for Emancipatory Practice in Social WorkUniversity of Central England, England, jerry.tew{at}uce.ac.uk Summary: This paper reviews the existing literature that seeks to conceptualize the operation of power, from modernist ideas of power as a thing that may be possessed, to a range of critical alternatives, including structuralist, Foucauldian and feminist psychological perspectives. This review provides the foundations on which to construct a framework by which social workers may be able to map out and work with issues of power and powerlessness more effectively in their everyday practice. Findings: Current frameworks, such as anti-oppressive practice, may be insufficient in being able to identify the range and complexity of power relations that may be enacted within a social situation. In order to provide a more comprehensive understanding, the article presents a discussion of the application of a framework for analysing the operation of different forms of power - one that acknowledges the potential of power to be both damaging and productive. Applications: Through a discussion of how the concepts within this framework may be applied to a practice scenario, and to issues around the use of power and authority by social workers, there is an exploration of how the framework may provide a useful tool for underpinning emancipatory social work practice.
Key Words: co-operative power emancipatory practice empowerment oppression power
Journal of Social Work, Vol. 6, No. 1,
33-51 (2006) This article has been cited by other articles:
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