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Poverty‐aware social work practice: service users' perspectives
51
Citations
34
References
2016
Year
EducationSocial Work PolicyFamily StrengtheningSocial Work PracticeSocial WorkFamily StudiesHelping RelationshipPovertyPoverty AlleviationCritical Social WorkHealth SciencesQualitative SociologyCommunity EngagementMacro Social WorkFeminist MethodologiesService UsersScholarly WritingSocial Work TheorySociologyGroup WorkInterpersonal RelationshipsProfessional CounselingSocial Work ResearchSocial PolicyQualitative Method
Abstract In recent years, there has been an increase in scholarly writing on the theory and practice of critical social work with people living in poverty. Yet there is a lack of research on the experiences and perspectives of service users regarding this kind of practice. This paper presents a qualitative study that explored the practice of a special poverty‐aware social work programme in Israel, through the experiences of women who took part in it. Using an interpretative interactionist approach, in‐depth interviews with nine women were held three times over a 2‐year period. Findings reveal a high degree of satisfaction with the programme on the part of the women. The satisfaction was derived from four main experiences: the experience of visibility, the experience of the active partnership in the fight against poverty, the experience of close, hierarchy‐challenging relationships, and the experience of responsiveness to material and emotional needs. The findings are discussed in terms of three principles of practice: intervention in a real‐life context, relationship‐based intervention and the focus on both the material and emotional needs and their fulfilment.
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