Title: Using Theories in Social Work
1Using Theories in Social Work
- Radical, Structural and Critical Approaches to
Social Work - With particular thanks to Phil Lee
2What will this session cover?
- 1960s arrival of radical social work
- The key concepts including those derived from
Marxism - Similarities between conventional and radical
social work - Differences between conventional and radical
social work - Influence of Radical Social Work on contemporary
practice - A Radical Social Work analysis of the present
role of social work see Bill Jordans work - Overall assessment strengths and weaknesses
3Age Old Dilemmas
- Of course there have always been radicals in
social work for example, the Settlement
Movements - There have always been central dilemmas for those
choosing to work in social work type activities.
As Jordan says they haunt the profession - For example, do you make inadequate policies
user friendly or do you try to mobilise
resistance and change the system? - Geoffrey Pearson powerfully argues in The Deviant
Imagination that essentially social work is a
morally ambiguous occupation - In short, one may be motivated to make things
better for the less well off and the
underprivileged, but in doing so you may be
simply reinforcing them in their own oppression!
4Radical Social Work an explosive mixture.
- Langan and Lee describe the RSW movement of the
60s 70s - as this internally explosive mixture
(Langan M and Lee P, p 1) - Some of the underpinning theories deviancy
theory, symbolic - interactionism, community work, feminism
will be more familiar - to those of you who have studied Sociology
- Some of this theory allowed social workers
others to have - a better understanding of the role of social
worker and - social works practices in the wider
society - According to C Wright Mills, RSW enables social
workers to - see the structural context of their
individual cases
5Understanding the State
- For OConnor the state under capitalism creates
- the conditions for continual successful private
accumulation (accumulation function) - The conditions for the production, reproduction
and harnessing of labour power (reproduction
function) - Welfare systems for a purpose to accomplish 1
and 2 in ways that do not provoke too much social
unrest, resistance or mass confusion, welfare
ideology and social control (legitimation/
repression function) is developed
6A Cynical View or Gaze?
- Reproduction of labour and social relations
- Ian Gough in The Political Economy of the Welfare
- State (1979, pp44-45) argues that the welfare
state - is simply the use of state power to modify
the - reproduction of labour power and to maintain
the - non-working population in capitalist
societies. - The State achieves this through the regulation of
education, - health, and the Personal Social Services
- This amounts to a frame of mind which leads
neatly - on to the notions of ideology and social
control - important concepts when in evaluating the
role of social work.
7Is This too cynical?
- Ideology Social Control
- Examples
- Deviant behaviours, mental health and
- medicalisation
- Reproduction capacities of people with Learning
Disabilities (Mental Capacity) - The regulation of asylum seekers
- Managing the poor surveillance and
- social control
- Anti Social Behaviour measures
8Key RSW Concepts for practising in a RSW manner
- Integrating these structural explanations into
practice - not relying on individual psychology or
pathology - Engaging in practices that were concerned about
and tried - to reduce inequalities
- Trying to bring about social transformations
trying to give - direction to individual and social change
that challenged - conventional practices
- Praxis always seeking to apply radical theories
in practice - Questioning the present social order and the
established ways - of doing things
- Conscientisation Frieres term working with
people to allow - them to see how social structures are
implicated in their oppression, - and identify appropriate actions
- Dialogic Practice working with people in an
equal relationship
9Some sensible observations here..BUT some things
are very difficult to do consistently in practice
- Some of the issues that the original RSW movement
emphasised have now become part of conventional
practice empowerment anti-discriminatory
practice feminist and anti-racist practice
client participation etc - Yet much of the analysis that the RSW movement
made about the wider social role of the social
work profession remains unchanged - Lets examine a critically informed analysis of
contemporary social work
10Explaining that dilemma in the here and now a
radical social analysis of contemporary British
social work
- Even before New Labour, contemporary British
public sector social work had according to Jordan
Jordan - ..become locked into a style of practice
that was legalistic, formal, procedural and arms
length..increasingly concerned with assessing
and managing risk and dangerousness ( Social Work
and The Third Way, p8) - New Labour extended and reinforced many of these
tendencies - Modernising Social Services (1998, DoH) was
primarily a very narrow document focussing
primarily on regulating local authority SSDs
through a series of supervisory and monitoring
bodies setting new standards and targets against
which to measure performance agencies to enforce
these and a new system for training social
workers under the guidance of the GSCC. The
Children Act 2004 can be seen as the same. - QUESTION How does Personalisation fit into
this analysis? -
11Thorough Critique of contemporary social work?
- Jordan Jordan go on to cover all aspects of
contemporary social work practice and related
welfare state practices - Fragmentation of public services into a number of
specialist functions, all with very narrow
instrumental briefs - Each with practice largely dictated by extensive
central government manuals guidelines
removing scope for social work professional
discretion and criticism - New agencies with strong deterrence and
enforcement ethos Asylum Seekers (NASS)
Benefits Agency Fraud Investigationtough love - Evidence based approach to social care leads to
a very narrow understanding of what is of benefit
for clients and has effectively led to the
de-skilling of both social workers and probation
officers
12Too narrow a view..
- Much New Labour policy revolves around the
concept of social exclusion assuming that the
deficiencies of the excluded are what need to be
addressed to rectify poverty etc - However, most of the better off constantly
pursue positional advantage - by buying houses in
better off areas, using better schools, accessing
private education, normalising private health
as a workplace benefit, developing gated
communities, joining private health clubs and
gyms, shunning public transport, preferring
membership of clubs to public facilities etc - Thus, social exclusion is as much about the
every day choices of the better off as it is
about any alleged deficits of the less well off - Capitalism generates such inequalities and
social work could play a much more progressive
role in addressing this. But how can it?
13A more critically aware social work would
- be based on more imaginative, creative,
democratic challenging ways of working - follow such methods as constructive social work
(Parton OByrne, 2000) and Fooks critical
practice ( Fook, 2002) - Allow for ambiguity uncertainty rather than
always seeking to ensure rigid order discipline - In short for the Jordans social work is not
a means a implementing policy formally and
directly, but of mediating local conflicts
generated by many of the new programmes, and
engaging with service users over how to fit new
measures to their needs - Is this realistic?
-
14Differences between RSW and conventional social
work
- Tendency for conventional SW to reduce complex
social problems to individual ones blame the
victim..deflecting attention away from social
arrangements - Better therefore to adjust to the present order
than challenge it, as RSW would urge - Conventional social work almost can be seen to
privatise peoples problems via
confidentiality rather than allowing them to
see how widespread they areand organise with
others to seek change - Ultimately conventional social work practice
reinforces the status quo and that, of course,
means the present order of global capitalism
15Weaknesses of radical social work
- Focus on collective practice and justice can
mean that it appears to ignore/neglect the
immediate personal needs of users - Therefore weak in offering practice guidelines
- Not focussed much on emotional issues
- Conscientisation requires insight and then action
not always clear how both can be brought about
by social workers in present practice situations - Limited view of power tends to see all power as
control - Under-estimates the value of conventional insight
therapies - Often untestable in practice therefore allows
itself the luxury of critique without
responsibility - Possibly over-estimates peoples desire for
justice and change
16Strengths of radical social work
- Has led to change a great deal influence of
feminism anti-racism disability rights user
focus etc - Forces social workers to take power seriously in
theory and practice - Users problems need to be contextualised in
wider society and practices - Important to constantly subject conventional
practice to criticism Payne states that it digs
away at the weaknesses of conventional practice
(p 249)