3 resultados para anti-oppressive practice
em CORA - Cork Open Research Archive - University College Cork - Ireland
Resumo:
The category of ‘religion’ as contemporary scholarship has demonstrated is a fairly recent innovation, dating back only a few hundred years in Western thought, and ‘world religions’ as we think of it and as we teach it is an even more recent category, emerging out of European colonialism. Thus the academic study of religion is both the product and, at times, the agent of colonial modes of knowledge. And yet, it is perhaps because ‘religion’ continues to be invented and reinvented through connections across cultures that investigating the work of religious ideas and practices offers such fruitful possibilities for understanding the work of culture and power. This article investigates religion and the study of religion as a mode of anti-colonial practice, seeking to understand how each have the potential to cross boundaries, build bridges and produce critical insights into assumptions and worldviews too often taken for granted.
Resumo:
Practice Links is a free e-publication for practitioners working in Irish social services, voluntary and nongovernmental sectors. Practice Links was created to enable practitioners to keep up-to-date with new publications, electronic resources and conference opportunities. Issue 51 contains advice for social workers regarding the use of social media. It also contains reviews on Cognitive-‐behavioral interventions for children who have been sexually abused and Psycho-social interventions for reducing anti-psychotic medication in care home residents.
Resumo:
American Musicological Society annual meeting, San Francisco, 10 Nov. 2011