Queering Professionalism

Pitfalls and Possibilities

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University of Toronto Press
Edited by Adam Davies, Cameron Greensmith
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With a focus on neoliberalism and its intersection with systems of oppression, inequalities, and the regulation of queer knowledge and subjectivities, Queering Professionalism provides a distinct contribution to the emerging literature on the regulation and professionalisation of 2SLGBTQIA+ individuals and others marginalised by cisheteronormativity within the helping and social service professions.

This collection seeks to queer and disrupt ideas and understandings of the 'helping professions' as benevolent and inherently caring by bringing together a diverse range of authors from different fields within the helping professions, such as child and youth care, education, early childhood education, dietetics, and social work. The book draws connections between neoliberalism, professionalisation, structures of cisheteronormativity, and other intersecting oppressions to examine the possibilities and pitfalls of professionalism.

Contributors come from various social service and helping professions to collectively critique how neoliberalism operates to silence and regulate marginalised perspectives within the various social service and education fields. By thinking with and employing queer theoretical frameworks, Queering Professionalism reimagines and disrupts neoliberal regimes that rationalize the violent conditions within and outside of helping institutions and orientations.

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Contributor Bio

Adam Davies is an assistant professor in the Department of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition at the University of Guelph.

Cameron Greensmith is an associate professor in the Department of Social Work and Human Services at Kennesaw State University.

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