Black Lives Matter special edition: critical and radical social work ten years on
(2022)
Journal Article
Nayak, S., & Williams, C. (2022). Black Lives Matter special edition: critical and radical social work ten years on. Critical and Radical Social Work, 10(2), 170-177. https://doi.org/10.1332/204986021x16557334670047
All Outputs (12)
An intersectional model of reflection: is social work fit for purpose in an intersectionally racist world? (2022)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (in press). An intersectional model of reflection: is social work fit for purpose in an intersectionally racist world?. Critical and Radical Social Work, 10(2), 319-334. https://doi.org/10.1332/204986021x16555682461270Reflection is a trademark tool of social work, but if reflection tools are blunt, they will never dismantle the house of intersectional racist oppression. This provocation contends that reflective models need to decisively focus on intersections of p... Read More about An intersectional model of reflection: is social work fit for purpose in an intersectionally racist world?.
Racialized misogyny : response to 44th Foulkes Lecture (2021)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2021). Racialized misogyny : response to 44th Foulkes Lecture. Group Analysis, 54(4), 520-527. https://doi.org/10.1177/05333164211039983
Black feminist intersectionality is vital to group analysis : can group analysis allow outsider ideas in? (2021)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2021). Black feminist intersectionality is vital to group analysis : can group analysis allow outsider ideas in?. Group Analysis, 54(3), 337-353. https://doi.org/10.1177/0533316421997767This is the transcript of a speech I gave at an Institute of Group Analysis (IGA) event on the 28th November 2020 about intersectionality and groups analysis. This was momentous for group analysis because it was the first IGA event to focus on black... Read More about Black feminist intersectionality is vital to group analysis : can group analysis allow outsider ideas in?.
A response to : ‘Intimate Others and the Othering of intimates : the gendered psycho-politics of the entangled relational’ by Farhad Dalal (Dalal, 2020) (2020)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2020). A response to : ‘Intimate Others and the Othering of intimates : the gendered psycho-politics of the entangled relational’ by Farhad Dalal (Dalal, 2020). Group Analysis, 53(4), 451-462. https://doi.org/10.1177/0533316420969592
‘Should I stay or should I go?’ Group-analytic training : inhabiting the threshold of ambivalence is a matter of power, privilege and position (2020)
Journal Article
Forrest, A., & Nayak, S. (2021). ‘Should I stay or should I go?’ Group-analytic training : inhabiting the threshold of ambivalence is a matter of power, privilege and position. Group Analysis, 54(1), 55-68. https://doi.org/10.1177/0533316420947999Having in mind those gripped by ambivalence over whether to start, or stay on, the Qualifying Course in Group Analysis, we consider the training as one in ambivalence. We see ambivalence as an asset, not a hindrance. Forsaking familiar notions of amb... Read More about ‘Should I stay or should I go?’ Group-analytic training : inhabiting the threshold of ambivalence is a matter of power, privilege and position.
For women of colour in social work : black feminist self-care practice based on Audre Lorde’s radical pioneering principles (2020)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2020). For women of colour in social work : black feminist self-care practice based on Audre Lorde’s radical pioneering principles. Critical and Radical Social Work, 8(3), 405-421. https://doi.org/10.1332/204986020x15945755847234This article offers women of colour in social work a black feminist self-care practice based on three principles from Audre Lorde’s work. The colonial situation of social work inevitably marginalises black feminist thinking and methods. In the contex... Read More about For women of colour in social work : black feminist self-care practice based on Audre Lorde’s radical pioneering principles.
Living activist struggles to end social injustice (2020)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2020). Living activist struggles to end social injustice. Critical Social Policy, 40(2), 179-195. https://doi.org/10.1177/0261018319898177
Black feminist methods of activism are the tool for global social justice and peace (2020)
Journal Article
Nayak, S., & Sheehy, C. (2020). Black feminist methods of activism are the tool for global social justice and peace. Critical Social Policy, 40(2), 234-257. https://doi.org/10.1177/0261018319896231We use the method of conversation as a tool of living activist struggles to end social injustice. We draw on Black feminism to create an intersectionality of diverse activist voices across time and space. We insist on an intersectional acuity to anal... Read More about Black feminist methods of activism are the tool for global social justice and peace.
Occupation of racial grief, loss as a resource : learning from ‘The Combahee River Collective Black Feminist Statement' (2019)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2019). Occupation of racial grief, loss as a resource : learning from ‘The Combahee River Collective Black Feminist Statement'. Psychological Studies, 64, 352-364. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12646-019-00527-wThe methodology of ‘occupation’ through rereading The Combahee River Collective Black Feminist
Statement (The Combahee River Collective, in: James,
Sharpley-Whiting (eds) The Black Feminist Reader.
Blackwell Publishers Ltd., Oxford, pp 261–270, 19... Read More about Occupation of racial grief, loss as a resource : learning from ‘The Combahee River Collective Black Feminist Statement'.
Location as method (2017)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2017). Location as method. Qualitative Research Journal, 17(3), 202-216. https://doi.org/10.1108/QRJ-02-2017-0004This paper grapples with a number of intersecting predicaments to frame a necropolitical question of who is allowed to inhabit and survive the locations of research, writing and the academy? Drawing on Lorde’s thinking about “historical amnesia” as a... Read More about Location as method.
Declaring the activism of black feminist theory (2017)
Journal Article
Nayak, S. (2017). Declaring the activism of black feminist theory. Annual review of critical psychology (Online), 13, 1-12This paper explores the ways in which declaring the activism of Black feminist theory troubles knowledge power relations, silence and hierarchical thinking. The Rape Crisis movement (rapecrisis.org.uk) has been instrumental shaping my standpoint and... Read More about Declaring the activism of black feminist theory.