1st Edition
Visual Communication for Social Work Practice Power, Culture, Analysis
Foreword by Professor Jim Ife; Acknowledgements; Part I. Framings; Chapter 1: Just Images?: Making Visible The Invisible, or, Why Visual Literacy is Important to Social Work; Chapter 2: Modernity, Social Work, and Professional Modes of Communication: Certainty vs. Ambivalence?; Chapter 3: Social Work and Visual Media: Not All Bad News; Part II. Practices; Chapter 4: Social Work and Research: Visual Methodologies and Everyday, Embodied, Experiences; Chapter 5: Giving Voice When Words Are Not Enough: Social Workers’ Practice With Images; Chapter 6: Human Rights Activism: Decolonising the humanitarian gaze and creating relationships of solidarity; Part III. Reflections; Introduction to Reflection; Chapter 7: Social Policy and Social Change: Popular culture, New Media, and Social Work (By Jioj Ravulo); Chapter 8: An Imaginarium for Socially Just Ideas: Making sense of visual (and other non-textual) practice (By Mick Houlbrook); Chapter 9: The Video Essay for Social Work Education: Visualising Knowledge; Index
Biography
Sonia M. Tascón has been a Social Work practitioner and scholar for over 20 years. As a practitioner, she worked in child protection, community work, clinical and hospital social work. As a scholar, she has published extensively in areas pertinent to Social Work, namely, race and whiteness, ethics, and human rights film and film festivals. Sonia has both a PhD in Social Work, and a PhD in Film Studies.






