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Empowerment and Human Diversity Chapter 3

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Title: Empowerment and Human Diversity Chapter 3


1
Empowerment and Human Diversity Chapter 3
2
Discrimination
  • Discrimination- the act of treating other people
    differently based on the fact they belong to some
    group rather than merit.
  • Lets think of some stereotypes that might led
    people to discriminate against others..

3
Stereotypes
  • Gay and lesbians are just confused or rebellious
  • Black people are good athletes
  • People with physical disabilities are
    unemployable
  • Hispanic males only date females much younger
    then themselves
  • Women are too emotional to make good supervisors

4
Stereotypes and Predjudice
  • Stereotype-A fixed idea of a member of some
    specified group based on some attribute or
    attributes that reflect an overly simplified view
    without appreciation of individual differences
  • Prejudice- a negative opinion about an individual
    or group that is not based on fact
  • Stereotypes and prejudice often contribute to
    discrimination, oppression, and economic
    deprivation

5
Discrimination
  • Discrimination occurs at two levels
  • Individual negative treatment of one person by
    another.
  • Institutional woven into the fabric of society.

6
Populations-at-risk
  • Groups of people who share some identifiable
    characteristic that places them at greater risk
    of social and economic deprivation and oppression
    than the general mainstream society.
  • Ex. Homosexuals, people of color, women, the
    elderly, individuals with physical or mental
    disabilities

7
What can Social Worker do?
  • Focus on the strengths of a client to solve
    problems and empower clients.
  • Empowerment is the process of increasing
    personal, interpersonal, or political power so
    that individuals can take action to improve their
    lives.
  • Examples
  • What is going well for you?
  • What are your capabilities?
  • Who is a support for you in your life?
  • Everyone has strengths. Use these strengths to
    empower others.

8
Strength Perspective
  • Historically, social work focused on deficits,
    dysfunction, and pathology.
  • In recent years, Social Work shifted towards the
    strength perspective to mobilize competencies and
    build self-confidence and stimulate hope.

9
Strength Perspective
  • 5 Principles of the strengths perspective as
    defined by Salebey (2002)
  • Every individual, group, family, community has
    strengths
  • Trauma and abuse, illness and struggle may be
    injurious but they may also be sources of
    challenge and opportunity
  • Social workers should never place limits and
    continue to help others aspire and grow
  • Collaboration is the best way to serve clients
  • Every environment is full of resources

10
Resiliency
  • Resiliency-the ability of an individual, family,
    group, or community to recover from adversity and
    resume functioning even after suffering serious
    trouble, confusion, or hardship.
  • risk factors adverse environmental conditions
    that increase vulnerability of individuals
  • protective factors-protect against
    vulnerabilities

11
Importance of Human Diversity
  • Social workers need to appreciate the vast range
    of differences among groups that relate to age,
    class, color, culture, disability, ethnicity,
    family structure, gender, marital status,
    religion
  • WHY???
  • To promote social and economic justice for
    population-at-risk of discrimination and
    oppression
  • To recognize the values and issues of diverse
    groups and to appreciate differences and build on
    strengths

12
Cultural Competence
  • Important to a develop a set of knowledge and
    skills in order to be effective when working with
    multicultural clients

13
Developing Cultural Competence
  • Develop an awareness of personal values,
    assumptions, and biases
  • Establish and appreciation of other cultures and
    nurture attitudes that respect differences
  • Self awareness of own culture and belief system
    and how that might influence interaction with
    clients
  • Recognize stereotypes and oppression of various
    groups
  • Commit to learning about different cultures
  • Acquire skills for working with people of various
    cultures

14
Race and Ethnicity
15
RACEReality or Myth?
  • Race a group with inherited physical
    characteristics that distinguish it from other
    groups.
  • With a population of 6 billion, a rich diversity
    of human shapes and colors exist.

16
Ethnicity
  • Race applies to biological characteristics,
    Ethnicity applies to cultural characteristics.

17
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18
Melting Potor Tossed Salad?
19
Tossed Salad
  • Although we are all living in the US, we maintain
    our individual and cultural distinctiveness
  • Social workers must address how people from
    various cultures have different ideas and
    expectations about what should happen during the
    intervention process

20
Some Common Cultural Values for Hispanics
  • Common language-90 of Latinos in the US continue
    to use the Spanish language
  • Familismo- Importance of extended family
    relationships that includes aunts, uncles,
    cousins, grandparents
  • Respect for the elderly
  • Spirituality and religion
  • Strict division of gender roles (ex machismo is
    the idea of male superiority that defines that
    man as the provider, protector, and head of
    household)

21
Native Americans
  • Extended family and respect for elders- sense of
    self is secondary compared to that of the family
    and of the tribe
  • Non interference-the deep respect for rights and
    dignity of individuals (self-determination) (ex.
    Children are rarely told directly what to do but
    encouraged to make their own decisions)
  • Harmony with nature
  • Less formal concept of time
  • Spirituality

22
African Americans
  • Extended family ties (ex. Often children are
    raised not only by the nuclear family but also by
    extended family members)
  • Role flexibility
  • Respect for Elderly
  • Close relationship with the church

23
Asian Americans
  • Family primary unit
  • Interdependence (ex chinese culture emphasizes
    kinship from birth until death.)
  • Filial piety-a devotion to and compliance with
    parental and familial authority even if
    sacrificing individual desires and ambitions
  • Investment in children
  • Patriarchal hierarchy-father is head of household
    and authority is not questioned
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