Susan Hillock is a professor of social work at Trent University.
"""Using a political economy and multidisciplinary approach, this volume provides real-life solutions to address the pressing human and environmental concerns facing the planet. Greening Social Work Education will inspire teachers, professionals, students, activists, policy-makers, and all those working in the human and welfare services to work for change, with clear examples to show the way. By embracing Indigeneity and green-red politics as foundational discourses, this timely book will provide a much-needed resource for many years to come.""--Carolyn Noble, Emerita Professor, ACAP, Sydney, and Victoria University, Melbourne ""Tremendous global and local challenges posed by ecological, socio-economic, political, and cultural forces are increasing in frequency and impact while nations fall behind in their pursuit of sustainable development. Greening Social Work Education is an excellent example of transforming education towards sustainability in a contextualized manner, in this case the education of social workers to better serve their communities. The transdisciplinary pedagogical approach of bringing together a range of world views, perspectives, and practical case studies to enhance thoughtful, critical academic discussion is a model for all professions to consider replicating.""--Charles Hopkins, UNESCO Chair in Reorienting Education towards Sustainability, York University ""Susan Hillock has edited a wonderful collection that sends a resounding challenge through the corridors of the academy and the field. Focusing largely on Canada/Turtle Island, this volume draws on Indigenous knowledges and urges movement away from settler-colonialist paradigms. It provides a range of resources to assist social work academics and practitioners in developing new curricula for the profession, and the arguments for the ensuing benefits for students abound. Drawing on examples from the works of English speakers who broke this terrain, Hillock ends on a hopeful note. Hope is a crucial ingredient in initiating and sustaining transformative change.""--Lena Dominelli, Program Director, Disaster Interventions and Climate Change, University of Stirling"