Abstract

In recent decades, social work has become increasingly engaged with issues related to multiculturalism on theoretical, practical and pedagogical levels. However, discussions regarding the ways in which discourses of multiculturalism are constructed have received little professional attention. In this paper, we present findings from a research project that examines prevalent discourses of multiculturalism in social work education within institutions of higher education in Israel. In-depth interviews were conducted with 33 social work educators, and 30 academic course outlines dealing with multicultural social work were analysed. Data analysis indicated that social work educators conceptualize ‘multiculturalism’ as containing three distinct attributes: descriptive, practical and socio-political. We discuss the construction of ‘multiculturalism’ as evolving in two opposite directions: from theory and from reality, and we conclude with practical implications for multicultural social work education.

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