This book shapes a situated body politics to re-think, re-write, and
de-colonise social work as a post-anthropocentric discipline headed
towards glocalisation, where human and non-human embodiments and
agencies are entangled in glocal environmental worlds.
It critically and creatively examines how social work can be theorised,
practised, and written in renewed ways through dialogical and
transdisciplinary practices. This book is composed of eight essayistic
spaces, envisioning social work through embodied, glocal, and earthly
entanglements. By drawing on research-based knowledge, autobiographical
notes, stories, poetry, photographs, and an art exhibition in social
work education, these essays provide readers with analysis and
strategies that are useful for research, education, and practice as well
as life-long learning.
The book constitutes key literature for researchers, educators,
practitioners, and activists in social work, sociology, architecture,
art and creative writing, feminist and postcolonial studies, human
geography, and post-anthropocentric philosophy. It offers the readers
sustainable ways to re-think and re-write social work towards a glocal-
and post-anthropocentric more-than-human worldview.