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Professionalization in social work. Staffan Höjer Phd and associate professor The university of Gothenburg, Sweden. What is professionalization?. A collective process organising the relations to the state, other professions and the public
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Professionalization in social work Staffan Höjer Phd and associate professor The university of Gothenburg, Sweden
What is professionalization? • A collective process organising the relations to the state, other professions and the public • An individual process that concerns the relation between the individual and her competence • A socialisation process - how to become a member of a professional group
Two important theoretical concepts (Abbot 1988) • Jurisdiction - declares the boundaries about who can do what - the controll over certain working tasks • Discretion - the space of freedom of action that professional have thanks to their education and experience
Different views on professionalization (1) • Trait views - Tries to answer questions like ”Is social work a profession” • Ex Flexner 1915 and Greenwood 1958 or Etzioni 1969. • Lists on what constiutes a profession; • systematic knowledge base,professional authority, social sanction, ethical codes, professional culture • Some people call this view naive.
Different views on professionalization (2) • Professional closure. Professionalization is a way for professionals to enhance their own status and position. To get jurisdiction in order to keep others out. • Some people call this view cynical.
Social work as a professional project • Let us focus on the collective level for a while • (Later we shall return to the individual level)
Important steps towards professional status for social work in Sweden • 1. Pre-professional activities and traditions • 2. The birth of the concept social work and later the title of social worker • 3. Supervision (as the first form of education - returns later) • 4. Education BSW (bachelor level)
Important steps towards professional status for social work in Sweden (2) • 5. Theoretical knowledge (books and theories for social work) • 6. Ethics (ethical codes= • 7. Masters education MSW. • 8. The birth of the academic discipline PhD in social work • 9. The establishment of the authorization system
Possible steps under way • Certification system? • Call for evidence based practice? • Privatization? • Service user inclusion??? • Other things?
The position for social work in Sweden is quite good • + very popular education, a lot of research in social work, almost every social worker has supervision by external supervisor, no unemployment • - salaries are not as high as many other, sometimes social workers are questioned in media, social workers try to avoid some social work jobs
Different forms of professionalism (Evetts 2006) • Occupational professionalism (based on the trust in professional knowledge, education, ethics and experience) • Organisational professionalism (based on regulation and controle, rules and regulations and routines)
Is there a move from occupational to organizational professionaism? • Marketization, New Public Management, EBP, New standards, effectivisation, value for money… all of that effects the view on what is the prefered professionalism. Management wants effeciant social servants.
Professional status - internal hierarchies • There are big differences inside the profession when it comes to the views about different jobs. • There is a drift from low status jobs to high status jobs • Low status normally concerns ”the exercise of formal authority” with lower profssional discretion • How status normally: higher discretion, fewer clients, more specialization,
Notes from an empirical study in Sweden • When asked about the status different social work jobs, the following list was created (Dellgran & Höjer 2006) 1000 social workers answered a questionairre:
Internal status - social work in Sweden (highest) • 1. Individual or family therapy • 2. Education and research • 3. Child or family psychiatric team • 4. Family law • 5. Personal administration • 6. Adult psychiatric team
Internal status - social work in Sweden (middle) • 7. Child welfare, open care • 8. Child welfare, local welfare office • 9. Social work in schools • 10. Child welfare, institution • 11. Health social work, somatic • 12 Youth work • 13. Alcohol and drug treatment, open care
Internal status - social work in Sweden (lowest) • 14. Unemployment and rehabilitation • 15. Probation social work • 16. Handicapped and disabilities • 17. Alcohol + drug treatment, institution • 18. Alcohol + drug Local welfare office • 19. Elderly care • 20 Social assistance
WHY? • Let us discuss the reasons in the group work and then come back to the discussion. • Good luck with your work!