Emancipatory, Relationship-Based and Deliberative Collective Action: The Power of the Small Group in Shifting from Adversity to Hope, Activism and Development

Vishanthie Sewpaul, Princess Nkosi Ndlovu

Medailon autorů:

Vishanthie Sewpaul is an Emeritus Professor at the University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa and occupies a Professor position at the University of Stavanger, Norway.

Princess Nkosi Ndlovu is living with HIV, and is an HIV/AIDS counsellor at the KwaMashu Community Health Centre in KwaZulu Natal.

Anotace:

The main OBJECTIVE of this article is to conjoin theory and practice through the voices of
a “service user/giver” and a university professor, to reflect on the voluntary work that we engaged in
22 years ago. The METHOD constitutes a theoretically informed, reflective article underscored by
emancipatory social work. The OUTCOME reflects an ethical imperative to shift from neoliberal,
new managerial and positivist paradigms to participatory and democratic ways of working with
people. This article, which demonstrates the power of the small group in supporting the transition
from adversity to hope, activism and development in the area of HIV/AIDS, has enormous
SOCIAL WORK IMPLICATIONS. On account of the dominant, influences of neoliberalism,
new managerialism and positivism, which prioritize profit above people and the environment,
demand that social workers do more with the least resources in the shortest period of time, and
privilege detachment and neutrality, social work has become increasingly de-professionalized. At
the heart of emancipatory social work, which humanizes science, is relationship and trust building;
process; reflexivity; cultural sensitivity and responsiveness; the ability to tune into the life worlds
of people; consciousness-raising in relation to intersectionality, power and privilege, building upon
people’s altered consciousness to engage in deliberative, collective action, and politicization of the
personal.

Klíčová slova:

emancipatory social work, group work, HIV/AIDS, intersectionality, micro-macro intersection, deliberative collective action

s. 108–122