新冠肺炎时期社会工作者的感官身体:社会工作实践中的悬浮、错位与重构的身体

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL WORK
Sui-Ting Kong, Catrin Noone, J. Shears
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引用次数: 5

摘要

经过一年多的COVID-19限制,英国政府现在发布了他们的“恢复战略”,其中社会关怀被认为是英格兰和分权国家COVID-19后恢复计划的关键。新兴文献已经探讨了社会工作者在COVID-19期间面临的道德和实践挑战,以及如何重新创造社会工作实践以接受混合工作方式。为了增加这一讨论,对从英国社会工作者协会(BASW)关于COVID-19期间社会工作的调查中收集的数据子集(176名社会工作者提交的280份回复)进行了二次定性数据分析,以探讨社会工作者的感官身体如何应对大流行带来的挑战。借鉴感官社会学和社会工作文献中关于隐性认知和实践智慧的内容,我们将展示在英国第一次全国封锁期间,社会工作者的感官身体是如何被暂停、取代和重建的,导致了对社会工作者实践的感官补偿和感官过载。在努力实现“更好的正常”的过程中,我们提供了实施混合社会工作实践的关键见解,并防止它可能给职业带来的不足。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Workers’ Sensual Bodies during COVID-19: The Suspended, Displaced and Reconstituted Body in Social Work Practice
Abstract After more than a year living with COVID-19 restrictions, the UK Governments have now published their ‘recovery strategies’ in which social care has been considered as key to plans for post-COVID-19 recovery in England and the devolved nations. Emerging literature has already explored the ethical and practical challenges facing social workers during COVID-19 and how social work practice has been re-created to embrace hybrid ways of working. To add to this discussion, a secondary qualitative data analysis was performed on a subset of data (280 responses submitted by 176 social workers) collected from the British Association of Social Workers’ (BASW) survey on social work during COVID-19, to explore how social workers’ sensual bodies had been responding to challenges arising from the pandemic. Drawing on sociology of senses and social work literature on tacit knowing and practice wisdom, we will present how social workers’ sensual bodies have been suspended, displaced and re-constituted during the first UK national lockdown, leading to sensual compensation and sensual overload that impacted on social workers’ practice. In striving towards a ‘better normal’, we offer key insights to implement hybrid social work practice and protect against the shortfalls that it might bring to the profession.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
22.20%
发文量
208
期刊介绍: Published for the British Association of Social Workers, this is the leading academic social work journal in the UK. It covers every aspect of social work, with papers reporting research, discussing practice, and examining principles and theories. It is read by social work educators, researchers, practitioners and managers who wish to keep up to date with theoretical and empirical developments in the field.
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