Abstract
Social justice and human rights are key foundations for the practice of social work, and most social work profession organisations around the world call on their members to advocate for the most disadvantage and marginalized within society. Colonisation has impacted negatively upon many people from around the globe and none more so that Indigenous peoples. The impact of colonisation has been ongoing and continues today. Therefore, social workers have a responsibility to know, understand how colonisation continues to impact upon Indigenous people and to work alongside Indigenous people to dismantle the structures that create inequality today. In developing an understanding of colonisation, it is also important to understand the debates around post-colonialism and decolonisation. This chapter highlights some of the debates and also argues that it is important to decolonise before there is any possibility of living in a post-colonial world.
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Green, S. (2022). Colonisation, Post-colonialism and Decolonisation. In: Hölscher, D., Hugman, R., McAuliffe, D. (eds) Social Work Theory and Ethics. Social Work. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-3059-0_7-1
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