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Telling stories of practice in the neoliberal context of English social work

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Version 2 2024-01-05, 15:27
Version 1 2023-09-01, 15:16
journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-05, 15:27 authored by Deborah Amas, Joanna Fox
The authors contend that the rise of neoliberal codified management systems within English social work increasingly restricts social workers freedom to be creative in their practice reducing them to social administrators. We are two registered social work professionals and academics who believe managerial contexts encroach on our professional values. As insider researchers we engaged in conversations and case storytelling to examine how our knowledge and practice as social workers positively influenced outcomes for people who have lived experiences. The two stories articulated in this article magnify how professional use of self can enact emancipatory empathy in the minutiae of practice. Collaborating as insider ethnographers supported us to deconstruct practice using critical reflection and reflexivity in postmodernist contexts. We highlight how micro examinations in collaborative autoethnography have potential for engaging wider philosophical conversations about social work identity.<p></p>

History

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

Faculty of Health, Education, Medicine & Social Care

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

53

Issue number

3

Page range

3289–3304

Publication title

The British Journal of Social Work

ISSN

1468-263X

Publisher

Oxford University Press

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Legacy posted date

2023-02-23

Legacy creation date

2023-02-23

Affiliated with

  • School of Allied Health Outputs

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