1. Cultivating Praxis Through Chinn and Kramer's Emancipatory Knowing
- Author
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Karen MacKinnon and Jessica Peart
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Nurse's Role ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social Justice ,Situated ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sociology ,General Nursing ,media_common ,Praxis ,030504 nursing ,Social change ,Core competency ,Environmental ethics ,Middle Aged ,Social justice ,Social relation ,Action (philosophy) ,Mandate ,Female ,Nursing Care ,Nursing Staff ,0305 other medical science - Abstract
Nursing actions in support of equitable health and social relations have always been central to the work of our discipline. The mandate for social justice advocacy is identified in many of our professional and ethical frameworks, with systems-level advocacy situated as a core competency for advanced practice nurses. And yet, the sociopolitical processes that generate health inequities are not always readily understood by nurses. Emancipatory knowing provides an accessible lens to reveal how social injustice occurs while delineating a practical structure through which reflective action can be undertaken toward social change, otherwise known as nursing praxis.
- Published
- 2018
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