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Auteur Kirsi Juhila |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
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From Care to Fellowship and Back : Interpretative Repertoires Used by the Social Welfare Workers when Describing their Relationship with Homeless Women / Kirsi Juhila in The british journal of social work, 1, vol. 39 (January 2009)
[article]
Titre : From Care to Fellowship and Back : Interpretative Repertoires Used by the Social Welfare Workers when Describing their Relationship with Homeless Women Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Kirsi Juhila, Auteur Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : pp. 128-143 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Cardijn
Aide sociale # Femmes # Travail social
TS
Sans-abriRésumé : "The study asks what kinds of interpretative repertoires do social welfare workers use and produce when describing their work, and how is the practitioner–client relationship described in the different repertoires? Social welfare work is approached through a single organization targeted for homeless women. The research data consist of a free-form diary kept by the workers. The analysis shows that the workers construct six different interpretative repertoires: repertoire of care, repertoire of assessment, repertoire of control, repertoire of therapy, repertoire of service provision and repertoire of fellowship. The repertoires are not anchored to given workers or homeless women. Individual workers adopt different repertoires, and a single homeless woman may be encountered in several ways. The variation in the repertoires and the movement between them make the work flexible. The quantitatively most frequent repertoire is the repertoire of care based on the ethics of care. As a carrying principle of the daily work, it may create a climate of trust and confidence which makes the other repertoires possible. Due to its variation and commitment to long-term care, the work with homeless women can be said to challenge predominant policies that emphasize the citizen’s own responsibility and the managerialist mode of operation." Permalink : http://cdocs.helha.be/pmblln/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=14289
in The british journal of social work > 1, vol. 39 (January 2009) . - pp. 128-143[article] From Care to Fellowship and Back : Interpretative Repertoires Used by the Social Welfare Workers when Describing their Relationship with Homeless Women [texte imprimé] / Kirsi Juhila, Auteur . - 2009 . - pp. 128-143.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in The british journal of social work > 1, vol. 39 (January 2009) . - pp. 128-143
Catégories : Cardijn
Aide sociale # Femmes # Travail social
TS
Sans-abriRésumé : "The study asks what kinds of interpretative repertoires do social welfare workers use and produce when describing their work, and how is the practitioner–client relationship described in the different repertoires? Social welfare work is approached through a single organization targeted for homeless women. The research data consist of a free-form diary kept by the workers. The analysis shows that the workers construct six different interpretative repertoires: repertoire of care, repertoire of assessment, repertoire of control, repertoire of therapy, repertoire of service provision and repertoire of fellowship. The repertoires are not anchored to given workers or homeless women. Individual workers adopt different repertoires, and a single homeless woman may be encountered in several ways. The variation in the repertoires and the movement between them make the work flexible. The quantitatively most frequent repertoire is the repertoire of care based on the ethics of care. As a carrying principle of the daily work, it may create a climate of trust and confidence which makes the other repertoires possible. Due to its variation and commitment to long-term care, the work with homeless women can be said to challenge predominant policies that emphasize the citizen’s own responsibility and the managerialist mode of operation." Permalink : http://cdocs.helha.be/pmblln/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=14289 Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité PER BJS 39/1 (2009) Périodique Centre de documentation HELHa Cardijn LLN Réserve Périodiques Disponible