From Cultural Competence to Cultural Consciousness: Transitioning to a Critical Approach to Working Across Differences in Social Work Corry Azzopardia and Ted McNeillbFrom Cultural Competence to Cultural Consciousness: Transitioning to a Critical Approach to Working Across Differences in Social Work Corry Azzopardia and Ted McNeillb

From Cultural Competence to Cultural Consciousness: Transitioning to a Critical Approach to Working Across Differences in Social Work Corry Azzopardia and Ted McNeillb

aThe Hospital for Sick Children, Division of Pediatric Medicine, Department of Social Work, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; bUniversity of Toronto, Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

ABSTRACT Driven by increasing cultural diversity and growing inequities in health and social outcomes, cross-cultural competence has become a fundamental dimension of effective and ethical social work practice. It has assumed aprominent discourse in social work education, scholarship, professional practice, codes of ethics, and organizational policy; however, how one defines, acquires, applies, and evaluates cultural competencies continue to be issues of debate. Grounded in a postmodern epistemic frame, an integrated model of critical cultural consciousness for working across differences in social work is proposed and implications for micro, mezzo, and macro levels of practice are discussed.

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