SWRK 1000H Study Guide - Final Guide: Cultural Imperialism, Aggregate Demand, Laverne Cox

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Social Work Final Exam Review
Monday, December 12th, 2016 @2:00pm
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first test - october 11th
worth 25%, during week 5
covers all material - textbook, lectures, video clips, case studies - from weeks 1, 2, 3, 4
50 multiple choice questions, 70 minutes
readings will be on test but not lectures
second test - november 8th
worth 35%
covers all materials “ up to week 8
70 multiple choice questions
cumulative, emphasis will be placed on last half
final exam
worth 40%
covers all course material “
weeks 1 - 12, emphasis on 9 - 12
80 multiple choice questions, 120 minutes
Micro - direct practice with individuals - one on one
Mezzo - working with groups and communities
Macro - working with organizations or communities to improve or change laws or policies
critical, anti-oppressive social work sees these three levels as interconnected
the first “rule” of critical, anti-oppressive practice is that we cannot simply blame marginalized individuals for their
experiences of hardship and suffering
Key Concepts/Ideas in Social Works
“helping”
oppression?
privilege!
there is a focus on the individual being at fault and not the system - blame is put on the individuals actions and not the
norms of society
Helping
making an effort to help individuals change
creating an outside connection not related to the subject
gives people a second chance and someone to listen to their problems
being a good listener and being empathetic
acknowledging your biases and putting them in the open
physical and mental health
learning from past experiences, constantly learning and growing
Social Work started with wealthy white woman in the 1800’s wanting to help disadvantaged individuals, making
decisions on who they think needed help and who didn’t based on what they thought poverty looked like
Oppression:
Exploitation
work/labour which benefits the dominant group, economically/financially, socially, politically
dominant group sets terms of exchange i.e. labour costs low/profits high
deepens inequities
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Marginalization
category of people isolated from social, political and economic spaces
based on ideologies, assumptions, stereotypes and prejudices
marginalized depend on dominant group for support
Powerlessness
those without power or access to power have little or no autonomy, authority over their work lives
few options for developing skills to promote themselves
Cultural Imperialism
dominant groups is the norm
stereotypes and ideologies become so normalized that they are invisible, therefore difficult to contest
allows others to be grouped by supposed characteristics associated with “them” - white males are not grouped in
the same way
Violence
becomes “acceptable” and in some cases expected because of social context and group identity
threat of violence always exists
Swrk1000H Week 2 Lecture: September 20th, 2016
Colonialism
began in the late 15th century, when Europe used violence, exploitation, power, and control to take over and rule
80% of the globe
European colonialism established colonies (restricting individuals to act and be in certain ways) in over 80% of
the globe, including Africa, Asia, and the Americas. Canada was included in European colonialism and/or “expansion”
“bothering” was used as a major justification for colonial expansion - classification of certain groups (indigenous
populations, women) as inferior, savage, backwards, uncivilized, heathen, subhuman, abnormal; therefore needing to be
“saved”, “helped”, and ruled by imperial authorities/colonists who considered themselves to be superior, rational, human
beings
women need to be considered less so men are considered to be more powerful
control and exploitation of land and of bodies was justifiable because “others” were deemed to lack qualities and
characteristics necessary to survive and thrive in Western, capitalist civilizations. they simply could not survive without
help
populations were surviving and thriving without the Europeans help, but they came in and told them that they
actually could not survive without their help
colonialism was (and still is) the site of false distinctions/categories which create colonizers and colonized,
superior and inferior, civilized and uncivilized, along the lines of racialization and race
introduced sexism - women were leaders in indigenous communities and then we changed the perspective on that
ageism - elderly people are incapable, younger people are not knowledgeable, spot in the middle where they know
everything and are unstoppable
ableism - differently abled people are inferior and lacking, and those who are able are better than everyone, those
while mental health problems need someone to make their decisions for them, as they are incapable of making decisions
for themselves
history of social work is founded on colonialism
always have to keep in mind where structures some in, and how they shape individuals’ experience
Race is the made up assumption that your skin colour matters, even though it doesn’t - if you don’t have white skin, you
are inferior, and therefore you need to be changed
whoever has the power in history gets to tell the story, and they choose what gets put in and what doesn’t
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