BALÁŽ, Roman. Challenges of critical social work practice with members of the Roma minority. In ECSWR 2023 12th European Conference for Social Work Research. Milano: ESWRA. 2023.
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Basic information
Original name Challenges of critical social work practice with members of the Roma minority
Authors BALÁŽ, Roman.
Edition ECSWR 2023 12th European Conference for Social Work Research. Milano: ESWRA. 2023.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 50602 Public administration
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Keywords (in Czech) kritická sociální práce, Romové, subjektivní pozice, praxe sociální práce, případová studie
Keywords in English critical social work, Roma minority, subjective positions, social work practice, case study
Tags International impact
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Roman Baláž, Ph.D., učo 180944. Changed: 14/4/2023 20:35.
Abstract
Social work has changed its mission (IFSW/IASSW, 2014), and principles of social justice, human rights, collective responsibility, and respect for diversities have strengthened people's positions. Critical social work practice (Fook, 2012) has acquired more importance in line with such development. Furthermore, in those settings, social workers should be aware of the oppressive systems they are part of (Payne, 2016). In the context of the Czech Republic, oppression and misuse of power are often experienced in the coexistence of the Roma minority with the Czech majority. Using case study methodology (Gilgun, 1994), I selected a case of such problematic coexistence. I asked, "What social work practice is constructed by involved experts, stakeholders, and members of the Roma minority?" A qualitative, mixed-method approach was used for data gathering (n=64). In-depth interviewing was combined with focus groups with members of the Roma minority, stakeholders, and experts. Moreover, observation of events held by the city council was conducted. By using discursive analysis (Gill, 2000) and methodology of subjective positioning (Davies & Harré, 1990), I have described two discourses (victims and free-riders) and six subjective positions (Roma minority: bosses, sufferers, and sleepers; experts from Czech majority: leaders, capitulants, and dreamers) whose mutual interactions create a practice that is charged with latent violence and oppression. Although the social work practice is officially treated as highly professional, my study uncovers problems with blaming and victimizing Roma, on the one hand, and the burnout and denigration of experts, on the other. In such a discursive context, social work practice's main challenge is finding ways to limit the power of bosses, empower sufferers, revive sleepers, motivate leaders, support capitulants, and cherish dreamers.
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