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  • Kath. HS Sozialwesen  (2)
  • IGB Berlin
  • Müncheberg ZALF
  • Hodge, David R.
  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_534304702
    ISSN: 0037-8046
    Content: Some gay men, lesbians, and other progressives view orthodox religious believers as perpetrators of oppression. Conversely, many orthodox believers, or as they might self-identity, people of faith, believe that gay men, lesbians, and other progressives wish to marginalize people of faith. Using Hunter's epistemologically based distinction between progressive and orthodox worldviews to understand the differences in perceptions, this article explores how numerous people of faith understand reality as it intersects the issue of homosexuality, both in the wider culture and in social work. The author suggests that to provide effective services to an increasingly diverse society and to remain grounded in the Code of Ethics, social work must work toward a more inclusive profession that accepts both progressives and people of faith.
    In: Social work, Cary, NC : Oxford University Press, 1956, 50(2005), 3, Seite 207 - 218, 0037-8046
    In: volume:50
    In: year:2005
    In: number:3
    In: pages:207 - 218
    Language: English
    Keywords: Religion ; Homosexualität ; Sozialarbeit ; Ethik
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_534302203
    ISSN: 0037-8046
    Content: This article argues that social work, informed by "new class" ideology, oppresses Evangelical Christians. The article discusses the rise of the "new class," along with its attendant ideology, which sanctions and legitimizes discrimination against Evangelicals and other people of faith. The role of social work, a "new class" profession, in the oppression of Evangelicals is profiled, and its inability to extend tolerance to this population is traced to its "new class" ideology, which inhibits it from functioning in accordance with its professed values and ethics. Consequently, the article suggests that social work is losing touch with numerous ethnic and religious minority groups, and unless the profession deconstructs the ideology that informs it, it will be unable to provide services to or facilitate dialogue among the increasingly diverse populations of North America.
    In: Social work, Cary, NC : Oxford University Press, 1956, 47(2002), 4, Seite 401 - 414, 0037-8046
    In: volume:47
    In: year:2002
    In: number:4
    In: pages:401 - 414
    Language: English
    Keywords: Konfession ; Ethik ; Sozialarbeit
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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