贫困:社会工作视角

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q3 SOCIAL WORK Journal of Social Work Practice Pub Date : 2023-04-03 DOI:10.1080/02650533.2023.2233845
Helen Hingley‐Jones, G. Kirwan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关注贫困的特刊的最初想法可以追溯到几年前,当时似乎是时候评估持续的严峻时期对服务用户和社会工作专业的影响。尽管由于在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间引入了各种财务策略,证据不一,但在英国,至少家庭和个人使用食品银行的人数增加,以及社区某些部分(例如英国背景下的孟加拉国人、巴基斯坦人和黑人种族(Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2023))的贫困经历不成比例,表明贫困仍然是社会工作的主要关注点(英国社会工作者协会[BASW], 2023)。为了与期刊的目标保持一致,我们在论文征集中要求作者可以提出考虑社会正义和贫困的社会结构方面的论文,但也要考虑贫困的情感和关系生活经历的维度。COVID-19大流行中断并减缓了收集论文的过程,我们想知道从业人员、服务使用者和学者都面临贫困和心理社会限制的影响,是否使这一主题过于现实,难以让作者考虑。然而,当我们开始收到来自一系列国家的作家的论文时,我们对贫困影响的心理社会因素的关注范围扩大了,从而表明贫困是世界许多地方社会工作者普遍关注的问题。这些论文更关注的是直接强调社会工作者个人和专业学科本身在推动发展目标方面所起的作用,这些国家面临着比相对富裕的西方国家更大的挑战。在最终确定本期文章的选择时,我们认为重要的是要包括一些关于社会工作中的国际话语和专业人士对贫困对许多人生活的无情影响的共同关注的论文。最后,从生态学的角度来看,本SI中的论文范围从更广泛的,社会结构的,发展的主题,到关于社会工作干预和机构的中等水平的主题,以及揭示更多个人的,生活的贫困经验和社会工作与这些相互作用的论文。因此,本SI收录的文章涉及贫困的各个方面,以及贫困可能在一系列维度上对生活现实产生负面影响的许多方式。虽然一些文章提供了贫困的量化,但我们从来没有打算只关注数字。几十年来,人们一直非常关注贫困的定量研究,包括如何衡量足够的收入水平,如何评估财富,如何计算生活在贫困中的人数以及贫困的时间。对贫穷进行定量研究是重要的,以便为消除贫穷的战略提供信息,但它只能提供对贫穷情况的部分了解。数字可以揭示保护系统的模式、极端和失败,它们是社会工作者和其他人努力提供关键和可操作响应的基本工具。《社会工作实践杂志》2023,VOL. 37, NO. 5。2,131 - 135 https://doi.org/10.1080/02650533.2023.2233845
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Poverty: social work perspectives
The original idea for a Special Issue focusing on poverty stems back several years when it seemed timely to take stock of how continuing austere times were impacting upon service users and the social work profession. Although evidence is mixed due to various financial strategies introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic, in the UK at least the rise in the use by families and individuals of foodbanks and disproportionate experiences of poverty within sections of the community (e.g. Bangladeshi, Pakistani and Black ethnicities in the UK context (Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 2023)) reveal that poverty remains a primary concern for social work (British Association of Social Workers [BASW], 2023). In keeping with the journal aims we requested in the Call for Papers that authors might propose papers considering social justice and social structural aspects of poverty, but also dimensions incorporating emotional and relational lived experiences of poverty. The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted and slowed the process of gathering papers and we wondered whether the impact of poverty and psychosocial restrictions facing practitioners, service users and academics alike, made the subject too present and too overwhelming for authors to consider. However, our focus on psychosocial elements of poverty’s influence broadened as we began to receive papers from writers based in a range of countries, thus indicating how poverty is of ubiquitous concern to social workers in many parts of the world. These papers were more concerned with directly highlighting the role taken by individual social workers, and the professional discipline itself, in driving forward development aims in nations facing much greater challenges than those experienced in relatively wealthy western countries. In finalising the selection of articles for this issue, we felt it important to include some papers addressing this international discourse within social work and the shared concern within the profession regarding the relentless impact of poverty in the lives of many people. In the end, taking an ecological perspective, the papers in this SI range from those with wider, social structural, developmental themes through to medium level themes concerning social work interventions and agencies and to papers which reveal the more personal, lived experiences of poverty and social work’s interaction with these. This SI thus encompasses articles that touch on various aspects of poverty and the many ways in which poverty can negatively influence lived realities across a spectrum of dimensions. While the quantification of poverty is provided in some articles, it was never our intention to only focus on numbers. For decades, there has been a strong focus on the quantitative study of poverty including how to measure an adequate level of income, how to assess wealth, how to count the numbers of people who live in poverty, and for how long. The quantitative study of poverty is important in order to inform strategies to combat poverty, but it can only provide insight into part of the poverty picture. Numbers can reveal patterns, extremes, and failures in protective systems, and they are essential tools in efforts by social workers and others to provide critical and actionable responses JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE 2023, VOL. 37, NO. 2, 131–135 https://doi.org/10.1080/02650533.2023.2233845
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
7.10%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: The Journal of Social Work Practice publishes high quality refereed articles devoted to the exploration and analysis of practice in social welfare and allied health professions from psychodynamic and systemic perspectives. This includes counselling, social care planning, education and training, research, institutional life, management and organisation or policy-making. Articles are also welcome that critically examine the psychodynamic tradition in the light of other theoretical orientations or explanatory systems. The Journal of Social Work Practice is committed to a policy of equal opportunities and actively strives to foster all forms of intercultural dialogue and debate.
期刊最新文献
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