Directions in constructing a body of knowledge in eco-social work education and practice in Uganda: Actions, channels, and implications
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Date
2023-04
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Journal of Social Work
Abstract
In recent times, Uganda has witnessed human suffering resulting from the occurrence of environmental disasters thereby placing
social work professionals, particularly those in civic organizations at the forefront of responses. As such, this article argues that
the country’s largely agrarian welfare system and its pursuit of sustainable social development urgently necessitate reframing
social work scholarship with an emphasis on eco-social theory for professionals to gain relevance and preparedness for actions
and interventions that address environment linked problems. Through case analysis, the paper presents four recent cases of
environmental natural disasters as a persuasion towards building an eco-social work body of knowledge. It then highlights the
education and practice actions towards an eco-social work knowledge. The channels through which this action should take place
are discussed and the implications of eco-social work thinking on professional social work education and practice are explored.
It concludes by proposing a model for eco-social work education and practice that integrates formal public environmental
safeguards and indigenous knowledge systems that champion protective and co-dependence approaches in people-environment
interfaces.
Description
Keywords
Eco-social work, Environmental social work, Social work theory, Disaster actions, Uganda
Citation
Bhangyi, V. B. (2023). Directions in constructing a body of knowledge in eco-social work education and practice in Uganda: Actions, channels, and implications. African Journal of Social Work, 13(2), 70-77. https://dx.doi.org/10.4314/ajsw.v13i2.3