Book ReviewsRecensions de publications

LGBTQ People and Social Work: Intersectional Perspectives, Brian J. O’Neill, Tracy A. Swan, Nick J. Mulé, Editors. Toronto, ON: Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2015[Notice]

  • Brenda K. Richard

…plus d’informations

  • Brenda K. Richard
    Acting Director, School of Social Work, Dalhousie University

This text focuses on the concept of ‘intersectionality’ as it applies to social work with lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer (LGBTQ) people in particular. It is a timely and important work as it is one of the few such texts situated within Canadian social work experience. The editors are highly experienced social work educators and LGBTQ practitioners who selected authors with particularities of practice and policy expertise to highlight critical junctures of LGBTQ issues and social work. The contributors share their knowledge by detailing the potential for transformative social work experience within a context informed by intersectionality as a defining feature. The selections reflect an ethical pursuit of mindful and informed teaching and practice while reifying activist goals for social change and honouring the pioneers who went before. As an additional feature, authors in this text were encouraged to utilize their own specific interpretations of the meaning of intersectionality. The book is not presented as representative of a particular definition of intersectionality but rather highlights the breadth of its manifestations in social work practice. The proviso in this collection of 18 chapters is that in our highly challenging LGBTQ environment, theories and definitions are in evolutionary flux; nonetheless this text is positioned as a resource for those in and outside the ‘helping professions’ and indeed it serves the profession of social work well. This book is structured uniquely by beginning with a focus on issues within LGBTQ environments themselves. Part I’s descriptions of the tensions “within and among LGBTQ communities” highlight the contexts and contradictions that may exist as challenges, even as they hope to influence and facilitate the development of protocols for social work practice. A social work emphasis on LGBTQ issues has been absent traditionally from schools of social work curricula and social work agencies’ policies and practices. Those that exist have not always been from a Canadian perspective. As well, LGBTQ material has often been reflective of a medical or psychological standpoint with little contemplation of the larger social and psychosocial issues that contact with LGBTQ communities could illuminate. In short, LGBTQ individuals have not been considered experts on their own experience as part of a history of being pathologized by misdiagnoses and misapplied legal, religious, and other institutional assessments. Part I also creates the challenging tone of the text and sets the stage for both the tensions and the rights to be explored as seen in Mulé’s discussion of Dis/Re-ordering the social order, the concept of ‘genderqueer,’ and the distinctions between queer liberationism and queer theory, with the former’s emphasis on activism and the latter’s focus on discourse rather than the precipitation of social change. He also challenges social workers to become informed of the “nuanced politics of the LGBTQ communities” in order to resist in solidarity the incursion of corporate and government moulding of social work itself. This is supported in Part I by chapters that focus on policies involving de-centering whiteness, clarity with respect to the “ ‘cultural divide’ between indigenous and non-indigenous people with same-sex sexual orientation and transgender identities,” examination and LGBTQ bifurcation of bisexuality, and the invisibility of older gay adults multiplied tenfold, in the intersecting homophobia of an ageist society. Part II of the text turns its lens outward toward social work itself, with a focus on policies and practices that are discriminatory and with recommendations for adjustments and alterations. This Part contains discussions of feminism and the experience of trans women with feminism and racism; informed gay caregiving, which has received little attention in the proliferating literature on caregiving; child welfare/youth social justice; younger lesbians, bisexual women and transgendered …