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Social Work & Sustainable Development

Social Work & Sustainable Development. ENSACT Joint European Conference 26-29 april 2009. Introduction. Leuven University College Department of Social Work Belgium (Flanders) Small research project: ‘Orientation of Social Work on Sustainable Development’

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Social Work & Sustainable Development

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  1. Social Work &Sustainable Development ENSACT Joint European Conference 26-29 april 2009

  2. Introduction • Leuven University College Department of Social Work Belgium (Flanders) • Small research project: ‘Orientation of Social Work on Sustainable Development’ (Financed by the Flemish Government) Contact: jef.peeters@khleuven.be

  3. Points of departure • Absence of ecological discourse and normative principles within SW • environment = social environment • SD = environmental care (physical environment) • Real connection between social and ecological problems • Development of ecologically oriented practices in some SW-organisations • First theoretical developments: • ‘ecological social work’ (USA–Canada: Besthorn, Coates) • ‘eco-social approach’ (Europe: Matthies, Nähri)

  4. Contents The challenge: transition Sustainable development (SD) SD and Social Work (SW) Projects Sources

  5. The challenge:transition into another society 5

  6. LPR-report 2006: Global ecological footprint in 2003 25% above the carrying capacity of the earth Ecological ‘Overshoot’ Transitie Ecol Econ (PTJONES) September 2008 6

  7. Ecological Footprint / continent

  8. Poor-rich: a growing gap

  9. The actual consumption and production patterns are socially and ecologically not sustainable Based on Carley & Spapens

  10. With redistribution • A more just redistribution of wealth without respect for ecological limits is not a good answer.

  11. Just consumption and production patterns: not necessarily sustainable Based on Carley & Spapens

  12. The challenge • Satisfaction of needs and creation of well-being for every world-citizen with maintaining ‘natural capital’. • That requires: • dematerialisation of the economy • a just distribution of welfare • a new vision on well-being • That means: transition into another society

  13. Sustainable production and consumption: socially just, ecologically maintainable power and participation quality of life carrying capacity justice Based on Carley & Spapens

  14. The question How to arrive there?

  15. 2. Sustainable development (SD) 15

  16. What is SD? Departing from the challenge: • BAU is impossible! • Sustainable development: a process of social transition that doesn’t leave one domain of society untouched • So the demand for a SD touches also Social Work (SW) SD: a new framework to look at SW

  17. Complementary strategies • Efficiency • Higher productivity of resources • Closing production cycles • Redistribution of use of resources • Sufficiency • Quality instead of quantity • Well-being as finality is more than material welfare

  18. SD: Brundtland definition “Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It contains within it two key concepts: • the concept of ‘needs’, in particular the essential needs of the world’s poor, to which priority should be given; • and the idea of limitations imposed by the state of technology and social organization on the environment’s ability to meet present and future needs.” (WCED, Our Common Future, 1987: 43)

  19. Debate about interpretations of SD Sourcet: Hopwood (2005)

  20. SD: a political concept • SD is a vague concept: reflects the complexity of the issues at stake • We regard SD as a political concept (cf. justice): different interest-based standpoints make up its content • Result: many different conceptualisations, contents, definitions, agendas, representations and images … - e.g. 3P: people, planet, prosperity (profit) • For SW? Which agenda, criteria, process?

  21. Normative principles of SD • meeting of needs • respect for ecological limits • common but differentiated responsibilities (in the first place between nations) • global justice • intra-generational equity/solidarity • intergenerational equity/solidarity (typical emphasis within SD) • active participation • gender equality • respect for diversity (based on the WCED process)

  22. 3. SOCIAL WORK &SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

  23. Social Work ‘The social work profession promotes social change, problem solving in human relationships and the empowerment and liberation of people to enhance well-being. Utilising theories of human behaviour and social systems, social work intervenes at the points where people interact with their environments. Principles of human rights and social justice are fundamental to social work’ (IASSW & IFSW, 2001)

  24. Social Work General objective of SW : improvement of the well-being of people Ethical principles: human rights and social justice Emphasis on process Central: participation and empowerment

  25. Comparison of normative principles Jef Peeters 2008

  26. Similarities between SW & SD • Large similarity in the normative principles concerning attention for well-being, justice, human rights, diversity and participation • Common characteristics: • Process-oriented • multi-level • multi-actor

  27. Possibilities of SD for SW “… the concept of sustainability is comprised of a two-fold possibility for SW … Externally, SW has a legalised possibility to demand that social aspects are taken seriously in the overall development of communities. Secondly, by applying criteria of sustainability SW can internally reflect on its own influence on the social environments of human beings. Especially the intra-generational point of view in the concept of sustainability leads SW to question the direction in which it is developing itself…” (Matthies 2001:134)

  28. SW & SD My thesis: SW has the potency to promote the necessary holistic approach of the social, ecological and economical dimensions of the required social transition.

  29. SW & SD: strenghten each other • SW has to broaden its contextual vision to the physical environment (cf. eco-social approach) • take into account the notion of bio-physical limits • meaning of the natural environment for well-being • attention for spatial planning and organisation • SW can reinforce the social dimension of SD: • emancipatory focus • the bottom-up approach of empowerment and participation is a trump • strenghten the focus on questions of redistribution • promoting social economy • SW can help widen the focus of SD on (basic) needs to other aspects of well-being, particularly those referring to new visions on a meaningful life (cultural aspect).

  30. New theoretical frameworks Crucial are among others: • An ecological world view: • a real eco-social conception of SD & SW • ‘ecological economics’ can be inspiring • A choice for participative practice theories • empowerment (instead of medically) oriented • social learning • participative research of eco-social context • A new theory of well-being

  31. Well-being • Redefining of a ‘good life’ • Rethinking of ‘emancipation’ - relation to work and consumption - relation to different forms of participation • From individualism to a relational idea of man: autonomy in connection • Importance of natural environment • Relation/difference between happiness and meaning of a life • Relation to time: “Time is meaning”

  32. GDP-growth and Life Satisfaction Zie NEF, ‘A well-being manifesto for a flourishing society’, 2004 33

  33. The current image of SD Economy Ecology Society The domain of SD SD as a ‘balance’ of 3 dimensions

  34. An Alternative (holistic) Image Environment is better protected and improved Society seeks a more environmentally sustainable and socially cohesive system Economy contributes through responsible business Action through collaborative governance, innovation and change Source: Nigel Room

  35. Advantages holistic image • More real i.e. more ecological world view • States the importance of maintaining ‘natural capital’ • Joins the concept of ecological economics • Embeddedness of economy in society • Joins the contextual vision in the tradition of SW: “Person-in-Environment means that a new multi-dimensional and holistic way of working can re-build connections between service users, decisions and politics in a given living area.” (Matthies 2001:141) • Makes clear why ecological questions are also social questions • The mediating position of the social sphere for social (and political) action

  36. Headlines for practice I ask attention for: • Building ‘social capital’ • Social learning

  37. SW –practice: building social capital • For a fundamental transition a society needs a large amount of resilience: - diversity and connectedness • Everybody has the right to participate and contribute. That requires solidarity and social inclusion. • Building social capital is both an objective and a part of a transition into a sustainable society. • Central place of empowerment as a vision and as a practice (social-psychological capital)

  38. Image of SW & SD: eco-social approach Society seeks a more environmentally sustainable and socially cohesive system Building Social Capital Social Work contributes through empowerment Inspired by Nigel Room

  39. SD as a process of social learning Ways to unsustainability are mostly well-known as contrasted with ways to SD, which has to be explored. Solutions that at first sight look interesting, appear sometimes to be contra-productive or even riskful for people now or in the future. Therefore SD presupposes by definition a continuous learning process. Theory and practices of social learning are crucial in view of SW & SD.

  40. 4. Projects

  41. Projects (1)Learning network SOWEDO DHO Vlaanderen (Sustainable Higher Education Flanders) organizes learning networks of teachers in different domains. The thematic learning network ‘Orientation of Social Work on Sustainable Development’ brings teachers of schools of social work and some social workers from social organizations together for study, discussion and exchange of initiatives about SD. It was initiated by our project SOWEDO. Website: http://www.dhovlaanderen.be/index.php?gm=4G9JH56L3&lang=&view=46

  42. Projects (2)KaDO: Framework for SD VODO (Flemish Council for SD), the Flemish master-organization for NGO’s that work around SD, has written (in Dutch) a ‘Framework for SD’ for use in social organizations, together with the following Flemish partner organizations: Woman council, Work for refugees, Forum of minorities, Network of associations where the poor begin to speak, Youth council. VODO (2008) KaDO: Kader voor Duurzame Ontwikkeling http://www.vodo.be/

  43. Projects (3)Erasmus IP about SW & SD 3 Flemish schools for SW together with 7 foreign partner schools set up an Intensive Programme. This IP will give students from SW and related fields the opportunity to exchange and to learn about ecology and sustainability in a multidisciplinary context. Teachers in the IP-partnership are challenged to share and develop this new area during three consecutive years in order to gain expertise and to develop the principles of sustainability as a third source of social work ethics (next to Human Rights and Social Justice). Contact: pieter.lievens@khk.be

  44. Projects (4): Thematic Network EUSW Workpackage about SW & SD In the informal sector many social movements and NGO’s have shaped and claimed the area of SW and SD but for professional workers in the formal and public sector many areas are uncovered yet. Achieving sustainability by applying methodologies of SW is a very new and innovative area of expertise. • A process of articulation across HEI’s European qualifying standards for SW education and training in regard to SD. • A process of articulation across HEI’s universal principles of sustainability in SW. • A process of sharing and developing methodologies of sustainability in SW. Contact: pieter.lievens@khk.be

  45. 5.Some Sources

  46. Sources • Peeters Jef (2008) ‘Conceptueel onderzoek SOWEDO’www.dhovlaanderen.be/files/SOWEDO%20-%20conceptueel%20onderzoek.pdf • WCED (World Commission on Environment and Development) (1987), Our Common Future, Oxford: Oxford University Press (Brundtland) www.un-documents.net/wced-ocf.htm • Baker, S. (2006), Sustainable Development, London: Routledge. • Matthies, A-L., K. Nähri, D. Ward (eds.) (2001), The Eco-social Approach in Social Work, Jyväskylä: Sophi. • Närhi, K. (2004), The Eco-social Approach in Social Work and the Challenges to the Expertise of Social Work, Jyväskylä: University of Jyväskylä. http://dissertations.jyu.fi/studeduc/9513918343.pdf • Coates, J. (2003), Ecology and Social Work. Toward a New Paradigm, Halifax: Fernwood Publishing • Besthorn, F.: cf. http://www.ecosocialwork.org/

  47. 48 Beeld: http://wordpress.com/

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