Abstract

ABSTRACTThe shifting demographics that come with migration and globalization have changed the settings for social work education in Sweden. To promote sustainability in a diverse society, strategies for inclusion and equality are essential in the development of core competencies in social work. One essential question is how social work education has responded to the demographic changes. The study aims to contribute with knowledge about how ethnicity is conceptualized in Sweden and to describe the impact the subject has on teaching forms and strategies. More specifically, the study investigates university teachers’ expressions of their teaching practices about the concept and addresses the faculty members’ narratives about the teaching situations. The study concludes that the lack of a coherent academic context for teaching ethnicity leads to the development of individual approaches by the teachers and a personalization of the issue of ethnicity in social work education. This creates a limitation on how structural elements come into play in relation to ethnicity, and in turn, leads to a shortage of a critical analysis of the construction of social problems where ethnicity plays a fundamental role. These circumstances precede theoretical perspectives on social problems related to ethnicity, migration, transnational relations, globalization, and racism.

Highlights

  • IntroductionEssential questions to raise are how social work education has responded to these transformations and how diversity content is embraced and handled within the teaching

  • The shifting demographics that come with migration and the globalization of societies are challenging the settings for social work in Sweden

  • Essential questions to raise are how social work education has responded to these transformations and how diversity content is embraced and handled within the teaching

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Summary

Introduction

Essential questions to raise are how social work education has responded to these transformations and how diversity content is embraced and handled within the teaching. In social work practice in Sweden, there is a political uneasiness about how migration and ethnic diversity is handled on both structural levels and in practical terms. This anxiety has developed and accumulated mostly due to the refugee immigration to Sweden in the fall of 2015, and because of alarming reports on increasing gaps between native and foreign-born persons regarding health, income, and educational inequalities (Albin, Hjelm Ekberg & Elmståhl, 2006; Gregg, Jonsson, Macmillan, & Mood, 2017)

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