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The tensions between culture and human rights : emancipatory social work and Afrocentricity in a global world / edited by Vishanthie Sewpaul, Linda Kreitzer, and Tanusha Raniga.

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Kreitzer, Linda, 1955- editor.
Raniga, Tanusha, editor.
Series:
Issn
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Afrocentrism.
Democratization--Africa.
Democratization.
Ethnology--Africa.
Ethnology.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (322 pages)
Edition:
First edition.
Place of Publication:
Calgary, Alberta : University of Calgary Press, [2021]
Summary:
"A critical interrogation of the relationship between cultural practices and human rights in Africa rooted in Afrocentricity and emancipatory social work. Cultural practices have the potential to cause human suffering. The Tensions between Culture and Human Rights critically interrogates the relationship between culture and human rights across Africa and offers strategies for pedagogy and practice that social workers and educators may use. Drawing on Afrocentricity and emancipatory social work as antidotes to colonial power and dehumanization, this collection challenges cultural practices that violate human rights, and the dichotomous and taken-for-granted assumptions in the cultural representations between the West and the Rest of the world. Engaging critically with cultural traditions while affirming Indigenous knowledge and practices, it is unafraid to deal frankly with uncomfortable truths. Each chapter explores a specific aspect of African cultural norms and practices and their impacts on human rights and human dignity, paying special attention to the intersections of politics, economics, race, class, gender, and cultural expression. Going beyond analysis, this collection offers a range of practical approaches to understanding and intervention rooted in emancipatory social work. It offers a pathway to develop critical reflexivity and to reframe epistemologies for education and practice. This is essential reading not only for students and practitioners of social work, but for anyone seeking a deeper understanding of African cultures and practices."
Contents:
Front Cover
Half Title Page
Series Page
Full Title Page
Copyright page
Table of Contents
Introduction | Culture, Human Rights, and Social Work: Colonialism, Eurocentricism, and Afrocentricity
1 | Disrupting Popular Discourses on Ilobolo: The Role of Emancipatory Social Work in Engendering Human Rights and Social Justice
2 | Nigerian Marital Cultural Practices and Implications for Human Rights
3 | Socio-Cultural Constructions of Intensive Mothering and Other mothering: Domestic Workers' Experiences of Distance Parenting and their Conceptualization of Motherhood
4 | Misrecognition of the Rights of People with Epilepsy in Zimbabwe: A Social Justice Perspective
5 | Harmful Cultural Practices against Women and Girls in Ghana: Implications for Human Rights and Social Work
6 | The Intersection of Culture, Religion (Islam), and Women's Human Rights in Ethiopia: Private Lives in Focus
7 | The Implications of a Patriarchal Culture for Women's Access to "Formal" Human Rights in South Africa: A Case Study of Domestic Violence Survivors
8 | Child Marriage Among the Apostolic Sects in Zimbabwe: Implications for Social Work Practice
9 | "Everybody Here Knows This, If You Want to Go to School then You Must Be Prepared to Work": Children's Rights and the Role of Social Work in Ghana
10 | Human Rights and Medicalization of FGM/C in Sudan
11 | Cultural Dimensions of HIV/AIDS and Gender-Based Violence: A Case of Alur and Tieng Adhola Cultural Institutions in Uganda
12 | When National Law and Culture Coalesce: Challenges for Children's Rights in Botswana with Specific Reference to Corporal Punishment
Contributors
Index
Back Cover.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Description based on print version record.
ISBN:
9781773851846
1773851845
OCLC:
1237644503

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