From Adaptation to Liberation
Social work always stands in a field of tension. On the one hand, it must help people live with reality as it actually is. On the other hand, it must not merely make people better adapted to undignified living conditions. The profession must help people endure, but also ask what can be changed. It must offer support within existing realities, but also open the possibility of movement. It must be realistic without becoming resigned. It must be hopeful without becoming naive.
This is the tension between adaptation and liberation.
Adaptation is not a bad word. In many life situations, adaptation is necessary. Human beings must adapt to illness, ageing, disability, loss, economic limits, children’s needs, legislation, social frameworks, and the freedom of other people. No one lives a life without limitations. No one can create themselves entirely freely. No one can begin again without bringing something of the life already lived.
In social work, adaptation can be an important part of help. A family may need to find a way to live with low income. A person with serious illness may need to establish new routines. A young person may need to learn how to tolerate school better, or find another path into community and work. A parent may need to learn how to regulate anger, create safer everyday routines, and receive guidance. An older client may need to accept help at home without experiencing this as a loss of dignity.
This is not little. To adapt to a difficult reality can require great courage.
But social work cannot stop there. If adaptation becomes the highest aim of the profession, social work risks becoming a practice that helps people survive conditions that should in fact be changed. Then the profession may become too obedient to the system. It may teach people to carry injustice more efficiently. It may make poverty more manageable, loneliness more silent, powerlessness more orderly, and exclusion less visible.
Then social work loses something of its soul.
For social work also has a liberating impulse. This impulse does not necessarily concern great political revolutions. Nor does it mean that the social worker should save the client or make the client free on the client’s behalf. Liberation in social work often begins much more modestly. It begins when a person gains a little more grasp of their own life. When shame becomes language. When chaos becomes parts. When rights become understandable. When a network can be mobilised. When a client discovers that the problem is not only “me,” but also the situation in which I stand. When a human being can act again.
Liberation in social work is therefore about moving from powerlessness to participation.
It is not always a great movement. Sometimes it is only a small step. To show up. To open the letter. To call back. To tell the truth. To ask for help. To set a boundary. To understand a decision. To say: “I cannot manage this alone.” To say: “I want to try this.” To say: “This is not only my fault.” Such sentences may be small in the language of the system, but great in a human life.
Social work must learn to see the significance of such small liberations.
In my lecture notes based on Judy Kokkin’s Professional Social Work, it is stated that social work is emancipatory, liberating, freeing, and creative. The relationship between client and social worker can be used in two directions: as life-adapting or life-transforming. This is one of the strongest formulations in the notes. It points toward a fundamental question: Should social work merely help people fit better into the living conditions they have been given, or can it also help people gain the possibility of transforming their lives?
The answer must be both.
Social work must help people live in reality. But it must also keep open the possibility that reality is not finished. Lives can change. Understandings can change. Relationships can change. Institutions can be challenged. Rights can be used. Networks can be rebuilt. Human beings can gain a different story about themselves than the one they arrived with.
But this requires that the social worker does not confuse the client’s present situation with the client’s possibility.
A person in powerlessness may appear passive. But passivity may be exhaustion. It may be learned helplessness. It may be fear. It may be the experience that earlier attempts at change led nowhere. It may be a lack of language, support, money, sleep, or safety. If the social worker sees only passivity, she may moralise. If she sees only structural obstacles, she may overlook the client’s own capacity for action. Liberating social work must see both.
The human being is both affected and acting.
The person is affected by conditions they have not chosen: poverty, illness, violence, childhood, class, discrimination, trauma, the labour market, the housing market, family relations, or the categories of society. But the human being is also more than what has affected them. The person can understand, choose, protest, ask for help, create connections, learn, grieve, forgive, set boundaries, and begin again. Not always. Not without support. Not without frameworks. But the possibility exists.
Social work must live from this possibility.
This does not mean that the client should be individualised in a brutal way. There is a danger in our time that everything becomes the individual’s project. The poor person must learn financial management. The ill person must learn coping. The unemployed person must become more motivated. The lonely person must be activated. The exhausted person must become more resilient. The person who falls outside must improve themselves. In this way, the language of liberation can be captured by the politics of adaptation.
Then empowerment becomes a way of placing responsibility back on the person who is already under pressure.
Genuine liberation in social work cannot be like this. It must take external conditions seriously. Human beings cannot liberate themselves from everything through willpower. One cannot think oneself out of poverty alone. One cannot motivate oneself out of a housing market that closes its doors. One cannot cope one’s way out of violence without protection. One cannot reflect one’s way out of loneliness without actual connections. One cannot be made responsible out of illness.
Social work must therefore be both individual and structural.
It must ask: What can this person do? But also: What must society do? What can the network do? What can the services do? What rights does the law provide? What creates the powerlessness? Which obstacles are internal? Which are external? Which can be changed now? Which must be carried? Which must be resisted?
This is a demanding form of realism.
It does not say that everything can be changed. But neither does it say that everything must be accepted. It says that social work must distinguish between what the person must learn to live with, and what the person should not be left to live with alone. Sometimes the social worker must help the client accept limits. At other times, she must help the client see that what was experienced as personal failure is also social injustice. Sometimes liberation is to adapt in a dignified way. At other times, liberation is to refuse to adapt.
This is difficult in practice.
The social worker does not work outside the system. She is part of it. She is employed, has a mandate, deadlines, legislation, budgets, and documentation requirements. She cannot promise more than the system can provide. She cannot abolish all limits. She cannot always act as she personally would wish. Sometimes she must communicate a rejection. Sometimes she must control. Sometimes she must intervene. Sometimes she must be part of what the client experiences as power.
The social worker’s liberating role is therefore always ambiguous.
She cannot pretend that she stands outside the power of the welfare state. She represents it. But she can represent it in different ways. She can represent the system coldly, mechanically, and suspiciously. Or she can represent it clearly, justly, and humanely. She can use the rules as a wall. Or she can use them as orientation. She can let documentation make the human being smaller. Or she can write in a way that allows the human being to remain visible. She can see the client as a recipient of interventions. Or she can see the client as a participant in their own life.
Liberation often begins in such professional choices.
Liberating social work is not about abolishing power, for the social worker cannot do that. It is about using power in a way that reduces powerlessness. To explain is such an action. To share information is such an action. To make rights understandable is such an action. To give the client insight into the process is such an action. To formulate a plan together is such an action. To write with respect is such an action. To ask how the client understands the situation is such an action.
It may seem small. But power becomes less oppressive when it becomes understandable.
Many clients experience the helping system as overwhelming and unclear. They do not know who decides. They do not know what rights they have. They do not know what is documented. They do not know what may be shared further. They do not know the difference between advice, requirements, assessment, and decision. They do not know what they can appeal. They do not know who does what. This lack of knowledge creates powerlessness.
To give relevant information is therefore not merely service. It is liberating practice.
It makes the client less dependent on the social worker’s goodwill. It makes the client better able to participate. It can strengthen legal security. It can reduce fear. It can make the system a little less mysterious and a little more manageable. When the client understands what is happening, the client can also begin to act more purposefully.
In this way, knowledge and freedom belong together.
But knowledge alone is not enough. Human beings also need recognition. The person who has long been seen as a problem may need to be met as a subject before she dares to act. The person who feels shame may need a gaze that does not make shame larger. The person who has become passive may need a relationship where small initiatives are noticed. The person who has lived under control may need to experience a form of help that does not simply take over.
Liberation therefore does not happen only through information. It also happens through relationship.
In the relationship, the client may gain a different experience of themselves. He may discover that he is not only a burden. She may discover that she can bear to tell the truth. He may discover that his anger conceals grief. She may discover that shame does not have to decide everything. He may discover that he has rights. She may discover that she can say no. He may discover that there are people who remain present without taking over.
The relationship can become a space where the person regains some of their own voice.
But the professional relationship must point beyond itself. It must not make the client dependent on the social worker. The liberating relationship is not the one that binds the client more strongly to the helper, but the one that makes the client better able to stand in other relationships, use their own resources, understand their rights, and act in their world.
The social worker should not become the client’s foundation of life. She should be a temporary point of support.
This temporary point of support can nevertheless mean a great deal. A person in crisis often needs a place where the world does not fall completely apart. The social worker can be such a temporary stability. She can help the client sort, understand, prioritise, and act. But the aim must be that the client gradually gains more points of support than the social worker: family, friends, work, school, treatment, activities, rights, routines, community, and their own capacity for action.
Liberation is therefore also network work.
Human beings do not become free alone. We become free through connections that carry us without suffocating us. A good network can provide support, language, belonging, practical help, correction, and hope. A harmful network can produce shame, violence, dependency, silence, and control. Social work must therefore ask: Which connections liberate? Which connections bind? Which connections are missing? Which must be strengthened? Which must be broken? Which new communities can be opened?
Loneliness is often a form of unfreedom.
The person who stands alone has fewer interpretations of their own life. Fewer places to receive support. Fewer witnesses to their dignity. Fewer opportunities to try out new actions. For this reason, liberation can sometimes mean finding a community. Not a large community. Perhaps only one safe adult. One leisure activity. One group. One neighbour. One teacher. One public health nurse. One friend. One social worker who can help the person further toward more connections.
The liberating task of social work is often to open such connections.
This is especially true for young people. Young people who struggle do not only need interventions directed at problems. They need experiences of belonging. They need adults who do not only assess them, but participate in their world. They need arenas where they are not first and foremost clients, but young people. A game of football in a street, a conversation after practice, an adult who shows up, a group that can tolerate differences, may sometimes mean more than a formal conversation.
Relational work in practice can be liberating because it gives the young person a different experience: I am not only a problem. I am included. I can contribute. I can trust someone. I can be part of something. I can be different from others and still belong.
This is not romance. It is social work.
For social distress is often also a loss of participation. One is left outside working life, school, family, neighbourhood, community, or conversations where one’s own future is decided. Liberation then means re-entering participatory relationships. Not necessarily fully and completely. Not without difficulty. But enough that life does not only happen to a person, but also through them.
Paulo Freire describes liberation as a dialogical process in which people act and reflect upon their world in order to change it. This is an important corrective to any form of help that makes the client passive. The human being should not merely be supplied with solutions. They should participate in the understanding of their situation and in the action that follows.
The social worker cannot liberate the client alone. But she can participate in a process in which the client becomes more acting.
That is a great difference.
To liberate someone from above is not liberation. It is a new form of power. Liberation must happen with the person, not over the person. It must build on dialogue, participation, and recognition. It must tolerate that the client does not always want what the social worker believes is wise. It must tolerate conflicts. It must tolerate slowness. It must tolerate that people take detours when they try to find their way back to their own life.
But dialogue does not mean that the social worker becomes passive. She has knowledge and responsibility. She must be able to bring in facts, legislation, risk, the child’s needs, society’s requirements, and professional assessments. Dialogue does not mean that all perspectives are equally good. It means that the other person is not made into the object of my solution. It means that I try to create a space where we can understand and act with the greatest possible respect for human dignity.
This also applies when coercion is necessary.
Social work cannot always be voluntary. In child welfare, addiction services, mental health, and probation, there are situations where society intervenes against people’s will. Then the language of liberation becomes difficult. How can coercive intervention be liberating? It cannot always be. Coercion can harm. Coercion can violate. Coercion can be misused. Coercion must therefore always be strongly justified and used with caution.
But sometimes intervention may be necessary to protect life, children, or basic dignity. A child may need protection from parental actions. A person in severe addiction may need limits in order not to die. A person exposed to violence may need help to break out of a dangerous relationship. Then the question is not whether power exists, but how power is used, controlled, and justified.
Even in situations of coercion, the social worker must try to preserve as much dignity, understanding, and participation as possible.
This means explaining. It means listening even when the decision stands. It means distinguishing between person and action. It means avoiding unnecessary humiliation. It means providing information about rights and appeals. It means being clear about what has been decided, and what the client can still influence. It means seeing the human being even when the action must be stopped.
Liberation in social work is therefore not the same as the absence of boundaries. Sometimes the road to greater freedom passes through necessary boundaries. But boundaries must never be used to make the human being smaller. They must be used to protect life, responsibility, and possibility.
This is demanding. It requires practical wisdom.
Social work cannot be governed by one theory alone. Sometimes we need systems theory to understand how families, institutions, and networks are connected. Sometimes we need psychological knowledge to understand trauma, anxiety, shame, and development. Sometimes we need sociological knowledge to understand class, marginalisation, and power. Sometimes we need law to understand rights and boundaries. Sometimes we need philosophy to understand dignity, freedom, and responsibility.
But in the concrete situation, all this must become judgement.
What is help here? What is control? What can the client do? What must the system do? What is adaptation? What is liberation? What is realistic? What is too early? What is too late? What is dignified? What is responsible? What is the smallest next step that can open more room for action?
In this way, social work becomes practical philosophy.
It is not only about applying theory. It is about acting wisely in situations where human life possibilities are at stake. It is about understanding what freedom can mean when the person is not free. What responsibility can mean when the person is under pressure. What hope can mean when the person has almost given up. What dignity can mean when the person must ask for help.
Liberation here is not an abstract ideal. It is a practical direction.
It appears in the way the social worker meets the client. In the way she writes. In the way she shares information. In the way she asks. In the way she endures resistance. In the way she sees resources. In the way she challenges. In the way she opens networks. In the way she uses power. In the way she ends the work. In the way she allows the client to be more than a client.
Perhaps this is the most important point: liberating social work tries to help the person out of a narrow client identity.
Client status can be necessary. It can give access to help, rights, and protection. But no one should remain first and foremost a client. The human being is more than their need for help. They are a parent, child, young person, worker, neighbour, friend, spouse, citizen, participant, believer, doubter, creator, actor. They have a past and a future. They have faults and possibilities. They need help, but they also need to be something more than a recipient of help.
Social work must therefore continually ask: How can help be given in a way that does not fasten the person in the client role? How can we help without making dependency greater than necessary? How can we provide support in a way that strengthens participation? How can we document without reducing? How can we use interventions without turning the person into the object of the intervention?
These are the everyday questions of liberation.
They cannot be answered once and for all. They must be asked in every case, every conversation, every decision, and every meeting. For what is liberating for one client may be overwhelming for another. What is necessary adaptation in one situation may be resignation in another. What is support in one relationship may become control in another. What opens room for action in one life may close it in another.
This is why social work needs humility.
Humility means knowing that we do not always know what freedom is for the other person. It means listening before we define. It means investigating before we conclude. It means allowing the client’s experience to challenge our theories. It means being willing to change our understanding. It means knowing that help can harm, even when the intention is good. It means not making oneself the hero of another person’s life.
But humility must not become passivity. The social worker must also dare to act. Not acting can also harm. Waiting too long can be betrayal. Failing to intervene can mean leaving people to violence, neglect, poverty, or powerlessness. Liberating social work therefore requires both humility and courage.
Courage to see. Courage to ask. Courage to challenge. Courage to write what must be written. Courage to support the client against the system when necessary. Courage to represent the system when necessary. Courage to stand in conflicts without losing sight of the human being.
Social work lives in this tension.
From adaptation to liberation therefore does not mean that adaptation is wrong and liberation is right. It means that social work must examine the direction of the help. Are we merely making the person more adapted to their powerlessness? Or are we contributing to more understanding, more participation, more dignity, and more room for action? Are we helping the client endure, or are we also helping the client move? Are we protecting the system from unrest, or helping the person find a way forward?
Sometimes the best help is to make life more liveable. At other times, the best help is to challenge the life that has become too narrow. Often it is both at the same time.
Social work must be able to sit silently with a person and at the same time know that silence is not the whole task. It must be able to secure money, housing, and rights without believing that life has thereby been understood. It must be able to support adaptation without losing the question of liberation. It must be able to work for change without despising the small adaptations that make everyday life possible.
This is a difficult balance.
But it is precisely here that social work becomes a human profession. It does not work with free individuals in the abstract. It works with people bound by history, body, family, economy, society, and their own choices. Freedom in social work is therefore never total freedom. It is situated freedom. Freedom enough to breathe a little better. Freedom enough to understand a little more. Freedom enough to choose one step. Freedom enough to say no. Freedom enough to ask for help. Freedom enough to begin living as more than a problem.
This may sound small.
But for a person in powerlessness, it can be great.
A life rarely changes all at once. It changes through small shifts in understanding, relationship, rights, networks, and action. Social work can be present in such shifts. It can be a profession that holds on to the human being when life unravels. But it can also be a profession that helps the person see that life is not only what has unravelled. There are still threads. Some can be tied. Some must be released. Some new ones can be found.
From adaptation to liberation is therefore not a path away from reality. It is a path deeper into reality, but with a question that does not let go:
Must it be this way?
This question is dangerous for all systems that want calm. But it is necessary for all people who need hope. Must shame decide? Must poverty be interpreted as personal failure? Must the client be alone? Must the young person stand outside? Must the parent be only their mistake? Must the older person be only a recipient? Must the system meet people as it always has?
Social work often begins by helping people endure what is. But it must not end there. It must also dare to ask what can become different.
This is where liberation begins.
Not as a grand word.
But as a movement in a human life.
From silence to language.
From shame to dignity.
From powerlessness to participation.
From isolation to connection.
From client status to human agency.
And perhaps this is the deepest task of social work: to meet the person where they are, but not let them remain there alone.
This essay is based especially on my lecture notes about social work as emancipatory, liberating, and life-transforming; the relationship’s two directions as life adaptation and life transformation; Freire’s liberating dialogue; and the social worker’s responsibility for action together with the client. The illustration was made by OpenAI/ChatGPT