Intersectionality and Social Work
The aim of this special issue is to present theoretical, methodological and empirical contributions that make the diverse and critical potential of intersectional perspectives fruitful for the discipline and profession, theory and practice of social work, taking into account that social work itself is produced by power and domination relations and is embedded in such structures.
The open section contains essays on the critical examination of patriarchal historiography, on gender and desire formation in dating apps, on the significance of the mother-son relationship for the formation of masculinity and a medical-historical examination of contraceptive objects.
Four reviews provide an insight into current publications in gender studies.
Editors: Denise Bergold-Caldwell, Christiane Bomert, Judith Conrads, Christine Riegel
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