2023
DOI: 10.1177/08861099231163651
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First They Came for Critical Race Theory …

Abstract: The year 2022 came to a close with the sudden and swift removal of Professor Alan Dettlaff, a respected child welfare scholar and leader in the growing abolitionist movement, from his position as Dean of the University of Houston Graduate School of Social Work (Flaherty, 2023). While this was one of the more prominent dismissals in academic social work, it put in stark human terms the impact of a renewed and effective onslaught of political repression in education. An academic social work community quickly gat… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In this era of intensifying political rhetoric and ideological polarization, the field of social welfare is being called to grapple with both the material conditions and effects of oppressive realities and the ideological manifestations of sexual, racial, and gendered hierarchies that underlie them (Zelnick et al, 2023). In the domains of research and policy analysis, this amounts to a need for raising awareness of the lived impacts of injurious policies—such as the PREA—while engaging the enterprise of research as a strategic vehicle for problematizing concealed dynamics of power and domination, raising public awareness of critical social issues, and galvanizing coalitional action.…”
Section: Concluding Remarks: a Call For Social Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this era of intensifying political rhetoric and ideological polarization, the field of social welfare is being called to grapple with both the material conditions and effects of oppressive realities and the ideological manifestations of sexual, racial, and gendered hierarchies that underlie them (Zelnick et al, 2023). In the domains of research and policy analysis, this amounts to a need for raising awareness of the lived impacts of injurious policies—such as the PREA—while engaging the enterprise of research as a strategic vehicle for problematizing concealed dynamics of power and domination, raising public awareness of critical social issues, and galvanizing coalitional action.…”
Section: Concluding Remarks: a Call For Social Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The last two editorial leadership teams also entered their tenure grappling with what it means to do critical feminism during moments of drastic political and social upheaval (Kim et al, 2021;Park et al, 2017). Our immediate predecessors raised alarms about social work educators losing their institutional positions due to their affiliations with abolitionist movements (Zelnick et al, 2023). The editorial leadership team before them decried the confines and conservatism of academia and asked, "How might social work scholars use what we know about community organizing to create brave academic spaces and scholarship?…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This neoliberal environment, coupled with the frightening onslaught of academic censorship targeting the very tenets of critical feminism and the ability to mention words central to our scholarship (Zelnick et al, 2023), leave us weary but also with the understanding that our work is more needed than ever. We write this on the heels of our first in-person editorial board meeting since the pandemic and with the high spirits and sense of community that we have been fostering over Zoom and emails.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%