Using partial justice to interrogate the meanings and applications of social justice in service-learning
PDF

Keywords

Service-learning
Social justice
Perfect justice
Partial justice
Remediable injustice

How to Cite

Mtawa, N. N. (2023). Using partial justice to interrogate the meanings and applications of social justice in service-learning. Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.14426/cristal.v10i2.1762

Abstract

This paper provides an account of the concept of social justice and how it is loosely and uncritically defined and applied in service-learning context. Social justice is deemed as an approach to service-learning, which allows all actors to actively participate in decision-making, share power and benefit equally. This framing of social justice in service-learning is largely within the realm of John Rawls’ perfect justice. There is relatively little attention given to small and actionable changes yielded in and through service-learning. As such, this paper uses the concept of ‘partial justice’ as purported by Amartya Sen to interrogate the meanings and applications of social justice in service-learning. The paper draws on qualitative data collected through document analysis, focus groups and semi-structured interviews with students, staff, and community members. The focus and contribution of the paper is timely and pertinent given the unexamined conceptions and use of social justice in service-learning context.

https://doi.org/10.14426/cristal.v10i2.1762
PDF
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.