Social work in times of political violence: dictatorships and acts of resistance from the Southern Cone
Capítulo libro
Open/ Download
Access note
Acceso a solo metadatos
Publication date
2023Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Muñoz Arce, Gianinna Inés
Cómo citar
Social work in times of political violence: dictatorships and acts of resistance from the Southern Cone
Abstract
The profession of social work developed in Latin America through crises and upheaval after the beginning of 20th century. A wave of dictatorships affecting Latin American countries in the 1970s and 1980s severely impacted on social work education and practice, having consequences in professional and political terms that are still being observed. This chapter aims to contextualise and revisit the period of dictatorships in the Southern Cone, the geographic and cultural region composed of Chile, Argentina and Uruguay – the southernmost area of South America. These three countries experienced dictatorships during overlapping periods, starting in the mid-1970s, and dictators had close reciprocal links, as the Plan Condor and the exile of so many people have demonstrated over the decades. Despite the fact that these countries have diverse experiences in terms of the politics of memory and reparation, a public agenda for recognition of the recent past and its atrocities has already been established. It is precisely that agenda which has also permitted the observation of practices of resistance, abandoning the idea of victims of dictatorship and recognising the capacity of many people, some of them social workers, to contest, subvert and resist the hegemonic order imposed under political violence.
Quote Item
En: Ioakimidis, Vasilios ; Wyllie, Aaron Wyllie (eds.) Social Work’s Histories of Complicity and Resistance: A Tale of Two Professions. Policy Press, 2023. pp. 121-133 ISBN 9781447364306
Collections