Cities Including Children

Human rights at the heart of the social work curriculum

Article

<p>Social work policy and practice all over the world continue to face the impact of the neoliberal agenda. Similarly, social work education has been subject to the economic and political changes, with an increasing emphasis on a discourse of ‘evidence-based practice’. However, it is the core of social work programs in higher education to initiate students in the fundamental values of social work, as they are recognized in the global definition of social work. In order to prepare future social workers for their assignment, human rights should be given an explicit place in the social work curricula at Universities and Universities of Applied Sciences. For human rights to gain more attention in social work programs in higher education, a Manifesto was written by lecturers’ social work in the Netherlands and Flanders, with a 5-point program to include human rights in the social work curricula. In this article, we elaborate on the five objectives that are presented in the Manifesto. Throughout the paper, we introduce small ‘case examples’ of how human rights can be integrated in education. These experiences show the importance of developing a particular social work perspective on human rights that is found in the idea of ‘human rights from below.’.</p>

Reference Reynaert, D., Dijkstra, P., Knevel, J., Hartman, J., Tirions, M., Geraghty, C., Gradener, J., Lochtenberg, M., & van den Hoven, R. (2019). Human rights at the heart of the social work curriculum. Social Work Education, 38(1), 21-33. https://doi.org/10.1080/02615479.2018.1554033
1 January 2019

Publication date

Jan 2019

Author(s)

Didier Reynaert
Peter Dijkstra
Jeroen Knevel
Jeannette Hartman
Michel Tirions
Clodagh Geraghty
Rudy van den Hoven

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