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Abolition in Social Work and Human Services

Visions, Possibilities and Challenges

Ian Kelvin Hyslop (The University of Auckland) Bob Pease (University of Tasmania)

$176.95

Hardback

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English
Policy Press
11 September 2025
The first to apply abolitionist theory from international perspectives to social work, this book explores whether social work has a future as a profession that challenges the perpetuation of unjust social structures. It questions whether it is possible for social work to become radical while it is located within the state.
By:   ,
Imprint:   Policy Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781447374329
ISBN 10:   1447374320
Pages:   342
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Further / Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. The Politics of Abolition in Social Work and Human Services - Ian Hyslop and Bob Pease Part 1: The Abolitionist Critique: Foundations and Visions 2. Why Abolition - Dorothy Roberts 3. Social Work and the Abolitionist Movement in the United States - Alan J. Dettlaff 4. Abolition and Child Protection in England: Is Another World Possible? - Anna Gupta 5. Radical Reflection Plus Radical Transformation Equals Revolutionary Social Work - Bindi Bennett and Péta Phelan 6. Punishment Disguised as ‘Help’: Carcerality in the Human Services and the Role of Social Work Towards Abolition - Sacha Jamieson and Lobna Yassine 7. Wither Child Maltreatment Investigations by Social Workers: A Case for Abolishing the Principal Carceral Link in the Family Regulation System - Lisa Merkel-Holguin and Ida Drury Part 2: Abolitionist Thinking in Practice: Implications for Social Justice Organising 8. Social Work and Social Justice: The Opportunity of an Abolitionist Lens - Ian Hyslop 9. Indigenous Child Protection in Canada: The Insanity of Doing it the Same Way - Peter Choate 10. The Roadmap to Child Protection Abolition for Māori - Kerri Cleaver 11. Prison Abolition as a Feminist of Color Project: Lessons from the United States - Mimi Kim 12. The Limits of Violence Prevention in the Non-Profit Industrial Complex: Moving Beyond the Masculinist State - Bob Pease 13. Transformative Justice Informed Community Responses to Harm: A Conversation with Idil Ali, Lauren Caufield and Anita Thomasson - Anne-lise Ah-fat 14. Dismantling the Master’s House? Abolition, Deradicalisation and Social Work - Sophie Shall and David McKendrick 15. Harm Reduction in the Opiate Crisis: Non-Carceral Community-Led Services and Compassion - Donna Baines and Mohamed Ibrahim 16. ‘Big Brother is Watching at all Times’: Lone Mothers and Their Children in ‘Family Hubs’ in the Republic of Ireland - Aoife Donohue and Paul Michael Garrett Part 3: Facing the Challenges of Abolitionism: Critical Engagements with the State 17. Abolition, Decolonisation or Public Health Reform: How Do They Align With a Communities of Care Approach to Child Protection? - Emily Keddell 18. Haunting, Abolition and Finnish Child Welfare - Kris Clarke and Mwenza Blell 19. Beyond ‘Doing Harm’ and ‘Doing Nothing’: Creating Generative Alternatives to Psychiatric Carcerality - Emma Tseris 20. Twin Births, Twin Abolitions: Abolishing the Capitalist, Carceral State and the Liberal Individual – and with them, Conventional Social Work - John Fox 21. After Social Work? - Chris Maylea

Ian Hyslop is Honorary Lecturer with the School of Social Practice, Faculty of Arts and Education, University of Auckland. Bob Pease is Adjunct Professor at the School of Social Sciences, University of Tasmania and Honorary Professor at Deakin University.

Reviews for Abolition in Social Work and Human Services: Visions, Possibilities and Challenges

“This powerful collection brings abolitionist thinking to the forefront of social work. It confronts the profession’s complicity in colonial and state violence, opening space for urgent debate on justice, liberation and the radical transformation of social work itself.” Vasilios Ioakimidis, University of West Attica and the International Federation of Social Work “This groundbreaking text is essential reading for anyone who is concerned about the future trajectory of social work or has questioned whether the profession can authentically make claims to challenging injustice and promoting human liberation. Showcasing the work of a range of critical scholars, this edited collection importantly offers concrete alternatives that address the current gap between the espoused social justice values of social work and the realities of much contemporary practice. Positing a radical rethink of the profession, the book provides a much-needed resource for educators, students and practitioners in the pursuit of a more emancipatory approach to social work.” Christine Morley, Queensland University of Technology “Society is increasingly immersed in a toxic brew of Orwellian and Kafkaesque forms of injustice. Into this mix, carceral surveillance melds with irrational, byzantine bureaucracy: a dystopian concatenation that attenuates agency, obviates human rights and objectifies personhood. Into this arena, the theme of abolition in social work takes on a particular purchase as cogently demonstrated in the latest progressive offering from Ian Hyslop and Bob Pease. This edited text makes an original and timely contribution to the reworking of abolitionist practices in social work by championing new visions, possibilities and challenges. I highly commend this publication and its seminal advancement of radical thinking and practice aimed at transforming carceral systems in society.” Stan Houston, Queen’s University Belfast (Emeritus) “In the context of rising global authoritarianism, social work is at a crossroads – will we resist and shake off the carceral logics and practices that have made our profession a technology of harm and control, or will we dream collectively and enact practices of care, mutuality and solidarity? In Abolition in Social Work and Human Services: Visions, Possibilities and Challenges, contributors wrestle with these questions on an international level. This is a crucial intervention in a discipline that can often be centred on the national or local context and one that speaks to the deep connections and relationships we’ll need to create to bring about a future social work rooted in the politics of decolonisation and global liberation.” Craig Fortier, Renison University College: University of Waterloo “Abolition in Social Work and Human Services interrogates the failure of the social work profession to live up to its own ethics of fighting injustice when it colludes with the state in the oppression and marginalisation of vulnerable and minority populations. From diverse positions and international contexts, the assembled chapters provide responses to this fundamental challenge in ways that are nuanced, practical and revolutionary. By upturning the role of the state, this book expands the horizon of possibility for a praxis of social justice. It is a text I want my students to read.” Anaru Eketone, University of Otago “A brilliant collection of work by seminal thinkers in the conversation about abolition in social work. Thought-provoking, intellectually stimulating, rich and grounded in communities’ fights to dismantle systems of harm worldwide. A must-read for all social workers and anyone interested in social justice.” Jacynta Krakouer, University of South Australia and The University of Melbourne


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