ScholarWorks > HHS > Social Work > JSSW > Vol. 31 > Iss. 4 (2004)
Keywords
Vietnam War, peace, protest, anti-war movement, sixties
Abstract
This article reviews four leading social work journals from 1965-1975 for content on the War in Vietnam and the social issues arising from it. It finds that social work's major journals carried nearly no articles, letters, editorials, or short subjects related to the war and concludes that the dominant discourse constructed in the journals excluded meaningful engagement with the war or protest against it.
Recommended Citation
Chandler, Susan Kerr
(2004)
""Curiously Uninvolved": Social Work and Protest against the War in Vietnam,"
The Journal of Sociology & Social Welfare: Vol. 31:
Iss.
4, Article 2.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.15453/0191-5096.3023
Available at:
https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/jssw/vol31/iss4/2
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