E-Mail: sandra.holtgreve@uni-bielefeld.de
Doctoral Project: Coloniality in the Global South and North. An Analysis of Social Work Education in Germany, Mexico and Ecuador
Since 10/2017 | Doctoral Researcher in the Research Training Group "World Politics", Bielefeld University |
2015 - 2017 | Student Assistant for international exchange programs, Faculty of Sociology, Bielefeld University |
2014 - 2017 | M.A. Sociology, Bielefeld University |
2014 - 2017 | M.A. Inter-American Studies, Bielefeld University |
2013 - 2014 | Student Assistant, Research project: Intersections of gender and indigenity in Ecuadorian pre-school education |
2013 - 2014 | Specialization in Migration, Development and Human Rights, Universidad Latinoamericana de Postgrado Líder en Ciencias Sociales, Quito, Ecuador |
2009 - 2013 | B.A. Social Work, Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences |
In the dissertational project, I analyze consolidation processes of knowledge on the decolonial theory in Social Work education in Germany, Mexico, and Ecuador. This research aims to elaborate an empirical case of micro-foundation of word cultural models: providing detailed insights on how undergraduate study curricula in Germany, Mexico, and Ecuador take up intellectual models of the global Social Work discourse. The dissertational project responds to the observation that interest in the decolonial project has exponentially grown over the last two decades. But little consciousness exists on how its content spreads in Social Work and why this happens now. My research intersects knowledge sociology, the theoretical lens of neo-institutionalist world culture; decolonial theory as an object of concern; and Social Work education as a field of study. I reconstruct the semantic landscapes by analyzing word frequencies, keyness-factors, and co-occurrences about decolonial theory in the 2020?s discussion of the Global Agenda as well as curricula in five Social Work Schools in the three countries. Additional content-analytical evaluation of 35 expert interviews on the curricular design and 5 IFSW-panel discussions sheds light on the background processes in the elaboration of these documents. My unique explorative approach underlines the interplay of intellectual trends and organizational models in the translation from decolonial theory to Social Work curricula. It evidences how semantic patterns and meaning-making of the decolonial project correlate with organizational dynamics and shows how diverse decolonial ideas are included and regarded in Social Work curricula.
The results of this project will remind readers of the very initial concerns of knowledge sociology. It invites them to see that the decolonial project too is situated knowledge that speaks to a normative mainstream of respect for diversity in response to the racialized-ethnicized and politicized discourse of our time. The project argues by example that it is possible and necessary to examine critically how exclusive and unequal the decolonial project consolidates across universities, how vague its theoretical argumentation has become, and how strongly the promotion the decolonial project against organizational constraints depends on the persistent work of individual actors and their allies. Finally, the work shows that it is possible and necessary to question the trajectory of theories, without necessarily questioning their normativity.