B2 Book section
Conclusion (2024)


Clarke, K., Lee-Oliver, L., & Ranta-Tyrkkö, S. (2024). Conclusion. In K. Clarke, L. Lee-Oliver, & S. Ranta-Tyrkkö (Eds.), Decolonising Social Work in Finland : Racialisation and Practices of Care (pp. 270-273). Policy Press. https://doi.org/10.51952/9781447371458.con001


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsClarke, Kris; Lee-Oliver, Leece; Ranta-Tyrkkö, Satu

Parent publicationDecolonising Social Work in Finland : Racialisation and Practices of Care

Parent publication editorsClarke, Kris; Lee-Oliver, Leece; Ranta-Tyrkkö, Satu

ISBN978-1-4473-7142-7

eISBN978-1-4473-7145-8

Publication year2024

Publication date28/03/2024

Pages range270-273

Number of pages in the book283

PublisherPolicy Press

Place of PublicationBristol

Publication countryUnited Kingdom

Publication languageEnglish

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.51952/9781447371458.con001

Publication open accessNot open

Publication channel open access


Abstract

The conclusion to the edited volume, Decolonising Social Work in Finland: Racialisation and Practices of Care, identifies the main themes in the book. The book examines how colonial structures, systems, knowledge and ways of being still influence society and social work practices in Finland. In pointing out the myriad ways that asylum seekers, refugees and immigrants inhabit precarious circumstances amid welfare state nationalism and homonationalism, the authors call for a more emancipatory Finnish social work praxis. It argues that decoloniality is not a vague futurism, but rather a practice that requires practitioners to imagine and design pathways for learning, engaging, revising and responding to the everyday ways that colonial ideology is rooted in systems of welfare.


Keywordssocial welfaresocial worksocial serviceswelfare stateethnic minoritiesimmigrantsracialisationstructural discriminationstructural violencedecolonisation


Contributing organizations


Ministry reportingYes


Last updated on 2024-23-04 at 12:54