Overview
Background
Dr Dorothee Hölscher is a Lecturer in Social Work in the School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work at The University of Queensland. She is a qualitative researcher whose work focuses on social justice, social inclusion, and participatory approaches with young people and communities in contexts of (forced) migration and cultural diversity. Her research examines how structural inequalities, xenophobia, and race-based discrimination shape everyday experiences, and explores practical, sustainable, and structural responses that support inclusion and well-being at community, institutional, and policy levels. Her methodological expertise lies in community- and art-based participatory research, informed by grounded theory and critical discourse analysis.
Dorothee completed her social work training in Germany and South Africa, including a Master of Social Science (cum laude) and a PhD (by publication). Prior to entering academia, she worked in refugee and migrant support, community development, and child protection, experiences that continue to inform her research and educational practice. Currently, Dorothee teaches across the Bachelor of Social Work and Master of Social Work (Qualifying) programmes, coordinating theory-focused courses on power, structure, and agency (SWSP1012) and lifespan development, culture, and disability (SWSP7044). Her teaching places a strong emphasis on participatory and critical pedagogies that prepare students for ethical and socially just practice.
Dorothee is the Deputy Chair of a UQ Human Research Ethics Committee and Co-Editor of Ethics & Social Welfare. Having held previous academic appointments in South Africa, Dorothee maintains these important international links through her role as a Research Associate with the Department of Social Work and Criminology at the University of Pretoria.
Availability
- Dr Dorothee Hölscher is:
- Available for supervision
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Diploma of Social Work, Evangelische Fachhochschule Rheinland Westfalen Lippe
- Masters (Coursework) of Social Work, University of Natal
- Doctor of Philosophy of Social Work, University of Kwazulu Natal
- Associate Fellow, University of Pretoria, University of Pretoria
Research interests
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Participatory and community-engaged research
Dorothee’s research draws on community- and art-based participatory methodologies to engage young people and communities as co-researchers. Her work examines how participatory processes can generate knowledge that is ethically grounded, contextually responsive, and oriented towards social inclusion and collective well-being, while also producing high-quality data on the issues under investigation.
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Forced migration, cultural diversity, and social inclusion
This strand of research focuses on the lived experiences of refugees and migrants in contexts of displacement, settlement, and marginalisation. Dorothee examines how migration regimes, social policy, and everyday practices shape inclusion and exclusion, with particular attention to young people, families, and culturally diverse communities.
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Social justice, ethics, and anti-oppressive practice
Dorothee’s work engages ethical questions through a social justice lens in social work research, education, and practice. Drawing on critical and feminist relational social theory, she examines questions of power, structural injustice, and responsibility, and contributes to debates on anti-oppressive and socially just professional practice.
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Critical and participatory pedagogies in social work education
This research interest focuses on the ongoing reconfiguration of social work education as a collaborative endeavour between academic staff and students, grounded in the principle of participatory parity. Dorothee examines participatory pedagogies that support students in developing ethical judgement, critical reflexivity, and a sustained commitment to social justice, informed by a realistic assessment of the contextual conditions and constraints of their future professional practice.
Research impacts
Dorothee’s research generates impact through collaborative approaches to analysing contemporary dynamics of social exclusion and inclusion and to advancing ethically accountable practice in contexts of (forced) migration and social work education. Working closely with young people, community organisations, educators, and practitioners, her research aims to contribute contextually relevant knowledge to build reflexive practice, ethical judgement, and capacity to respond to shared social justice concerns within community, institutional, and educational settings. The impact of this work is traceable through almost two decades of participatory research in Australia and southern Africa.
Through her collaboration with community-based organisations and youth initiatives, Dorothee co-creates shared understandings of contemporary forms and dynamics of social exclusion, and of the well-being needs of young people from racialised and marginalised communities, to generate outcomes valued by participants, including strengthened research skills, increased confidence, and opportunities for leadership and authorship. Her work on Participatory Learning and Action (PLA) extends this impact beyond individual projects by contributing accessible methodological resources for researchers, practitioners, and postgraduate students internationally, and her contributions to international debates on anti‑oppressive theory, ethics, and practice continue to inform teaching and curriculum designs that foster sustained student participation in higher education.
Rather than treating research impact as a downstream outcome, her work embeds translation and application within the research process itself to ensure that both practice and outcomes remain responsive to community priorities and oriented towards meaningful, practical and structural change.
Works
Search Professor Dorothee Hölscher’s works on UQ eSpace
2008
Journal Article
International Social Work: Editorial
Sewpaul, Vishanthie and Hölscher, Dorothee (2008). International Social Work: Editorial. International Social Work, 51 (3), 293-296. doi: 10.1177/0020872808090962
2008
Journal Article
The Emperor's new clothes: South Africa's attempted transition to developmental social welfare and social work
Hölscher, Dorothee (2008). The Emperor's new clothes: South Africa's attempted transition to developmental social welfare and social work. International Journal of Social Welfare, 17 (2), 114-123. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-2397.2008.00547.x
2005
Journal Article
A postmodern critique of the SACSSP's draft code of ethics
Hölscher, Dorothee (2005). A postmodern critique of the SACSSP's draft code of ethics. Social Work, 41 (3), 237-250.
Supervision
Availability
- Dr Dorothee Hölscher is:
- Available for supervision
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Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Understanding Australian intercountry adoptees and suicide: A constructivist grounded theory approach
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Paddy O'Regan
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Doctor Philosophy
Navigating Parenting in Transnational Spaces: Socio-Cultural Perspectives on the Preference for Informal Over Formal Childcare Among African Migrant Families in Australia
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Alina Morawska
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Doctor Philosophy
Towards Social Justice for the Hijra Community
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Heena Akbar, Associate Professor Kathy Ellem
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Doctor Philosophy
The role of leaders in mitigating and responding to psychological injury risks in socio-legal services.
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Jemma Venables, Professor Karen Healy
Media
Enquiries
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