Akt. Tsang, Representation of ethnic identity in North American social work literature: A dossier of the Chinese people, SOCIAL WORK, 46(3), 2001, pp. 229-243
Ethnic and cultural identities of people who are not white in North America
are conceived as natural and fixed categories. Such conceptualizations are
associated with a tendency to take ethnicity as a client characteristic in
stead of understanding ethnic and cultural differences as constituted by th
e engagement between social worker and client. Using Foucault's dossier app
roach, the author uses the Chinese people as a case example to illustrate t
he politics of identification and identity assignment in professional socia
l work literature in North America. The literature was selected from the So
cial Work Abstracts database from 1977 to 1997. The article reveals how Chi
nese people are "essentialized," "otherized," and negatively positioned as
an ethnic construct. Four major arguments are presented together with their
implications for cross-cultural social work practice.