The Social Worker / Le travailleur social
In this episode of The Social Worker Podcast, we speak with Alisha Stubbs as part of CASW’s special series celebrating 100 years of social work in Canada. Alisha’s journey began with a simple but powerful curiosity: why are people’s struggles so often treated as individual, when they are shaped by systems, relationships, access, and opportunity? That question has followed her across developmental services, adult protective services, education, nonprofit leadership, municipal politics, research, and early years advocacy. It has also deepened through her lived experience as a parent navigating autism diagnosis, school systems, funding, advocacy, documentation, and the emotional labour families are often expected to carry alone. Throughout the conversation, Alisha reflects on what it means to practice social work in the tension between policy and ethics, compliance and care, bureaucracy and humanity. She reminds us that systems are not always built with dignity, accessibility, or neuroaffirming practice in mind, but social workers can still move through them with intention, curiosity, and relational accountability. This episode invites us to think about advocacy differently. Sometimes it is public and visible. Sometimes it is quiet, behind-the-scenes work: changing one policy, shifting one conversation, supporting one family, or asking where flexibility might exist inside a system that feels rigid. Alisha leaves listeners with a grounding reminder for the next century of social work: find your people, find your peace, protect what sustains you, and never stop learning.
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