• Uncovering Social Work's Colonial Roots and Legacies
    Nov 18 2025

    Why should social work students care about the profession’s colonial history? In this episode, hosts Dr. Sharlotte Tusasiirwe and Dr. Abigail Joseph Magwood speak with Dr. Sonia Tascone to uncover how colonialism continues to shape social work education, practice, and knowledge today. Through global perspectives from Australia, Germany, Uganda, and the UK, they explore Eurocentric curricula, language dominance, racialized power dynamics, and the marginalisation of Indigenous ways of knowing. The conversation highlights the importance of discomfort, embodiment, and creative expression in decolonising practice.

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    33 mins
  • Understanding Indigenous Communities’ Approach towards holistic well-being
    Jun 23 2025

    What does ‘Wellbeing’ truly mean, and who gets to define it? In this episode, host Henglien Lisa Chen speaks with Dr. Wasiq Silan, an Indigenous scholar from Taiwan, to explore holistic, community-rooted understandings of care. They reflect on colonial legacies, power dynamics, and the risks of using neoliberal frameworks to achieve decolonisation. Drawing on Indigenous principles like Gaga and Malahan, the episode challenges dominant models and offers powerful lessons in cultural humility, relational care, and reflective practice.

    A thought-provoking listen for social work students, educators, and practitioners seeking to decolonise from the inside out.

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    30 mins
  • Beyond England’s Professional Capability Framework (PCF)
    Jun 23 2025

    In this episode, we go beyond England’s Professional Capabilities Framework (PCF) to explore its limitations in addressing global social justice and culturally diverse perspectives in social work field education. Hosted by Henglien Lisa Chen, our guests Phyllis Ngai and Shabnam Ahmed share insights on Indigenous rights, UNDRIP, and the need to challenge Western-centric frameworks. They offer practical strategies for educators and students to adopt more inclusive, critically reflective approaches to placement learning. The episode highlights specific ways UK social work education can engage with global and Indigenous knowledge systems.

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    35 mins
  • Rethinking Field Placements for Cultural Relevance
    Jun 23 2025

    What does a culturally relevant field placement look like in social work education? In this episode, host Ann Anka hosts a powerful dialogue with Dr. Carlene Cornish and student Zahra Farkane to explore how dominant placement models often overlook the lived realities of Black, Asian, and minority ethnic students. Drawing on the Sawubona model—an Afrocentric framework grounded in dignity, empathy, and seeing the whole person. The conversation offers tools to support inclusive learning and challenge racial bias. Whether educator, student, or practitioner, this episode invites reflection on power, identity, and transformative supervision.

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    29 mins
  • Community Care and Collective Healing in Social Work
    Jun 23 2025

    What does it mean to practise social work rooted in culture, community, and collective care? In this episode, guest Thierry Kwizera, a social worker from Burundi, joins host Henglien Lisa Chen to explore how community-led models challenge dominant Western frameworks. From gender-based violence interventions to environmental social work, Thierry shares how culturally grounded, group-based approaches create space for empowerment and healing. Together, they reflect on the importance of centering local voices, respecting cultural norms, and resisting top-down international aid. A powerful conversation for anyone reimagining social work beyond individualism and towards sustainable, community-based change.

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    22 mins
  • Integrating Indigenous Family Structures in Social Work Education
    Jun 23 2025

    In this episode, we are joined by host Libby Hammond and guest Shirley Young, an Aboriginal social worker from South Australia. The conversation challenges Western frameworks that dominate social work education and practice. Shirley shares personal and professional insights on the long-standing colonial impacts on Aboriginal communities that highlight how assimilation policies, intergenerational trauma, and systemic distrust shape present-day interactions with social workers.

    She also introduces the richness and resilience of Aboriginal kinship structures, illustrating how expansive and supportive extended family systems differ from Western nuclear models. The episode calls on future social workers to deeply listen, understand Indigenous perspectives, and value culturally grounded ways of knowing, being, and doing. Through stories and reflective dialogue, this episode is a call to action and a guide for integrating Indigenous knowledge into social work education. A reminder to shift from theory to practice in meaningful and respectful ways.

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    31 mins
  • Decolonising Policy and Advocacy in Gender-Based Violence
    Jun 23 2025

    How do immigration, trauma, and colonial legacies intersect in gender-based violence policy and practice? In this episode, host Professor Nishi Mitra Vom Berg speaks with Yvonne Tyree, a UK-based social worker with over 30 years’ experience supporting migrant survivors. Together, they explore honour-based abuse, trauma-informed care across cultures, and how power, privilege, and policy gaps shape frontline realities. With deeply reflective storytelling, Yvonne shares practical ways to decolonise field education, reframe advocacy, and work relationally with survivors. A powerful listen for social work students, educators, and practitioners committed to equity and systemic change.

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    28 mins
  • Understanding Adam’s Decolonial and Social Justice Framework in Field Education
    Jun 23 2025

    What does it mean to embed justice at the heart of education, technology, and field practice? In this episode, we have our host Michael Wallengren Lynch and Dr. Taskeen Adam, a researcher and educator whose work spans digital education, decoloniality, and global justice. Drawing on her framework of justice as content, process, and pedagogy, which also formed a part of the scoping review on decolonising social work field education, we explore how colonial legacies persist in the technologies and pedagogies shaping social work education today.

    Dr. Adam challenges the field to look beyond superficial fixes and equity talk, inviting us into deeper conversations about structural inequalities, AI-driven marginalisation, and the need to centre power and relationality in our practices. We reflect on the limitations of current digital tools and the possibilities of decolonial approaches that value plural ways of knowing, being, and doing.

    Whether you're a social work educator, student, or someone reckoning with the intersections of justice and technology, this episode offers provocations, frameworks, and hope for meaningful transformation.

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    26 mins