Critical social work in public social services: Poverty-aware organizational practices

Summary Whereas some studies have addressed the conditions and practices required to infuse critical notions into the organizational context of public social services, there is a paucity of knowledge on what a critical public service can look like in actual practice. This article explores the possibility of applying critical theory and practice at the organizational level of public social services. It focuses on one social services department in Israel that underwent a six-year process of learning and implementing the Poverty-Aware Paradigm. Findings Based on an in-depth case study that combines ethnographic and participatory methods, we outline how critical ideas are translated to four organizational principles: developing a critical learning culture, acknowledging services users’ knowledge and skills, leading a critical discourse in the community, and poverty-proofing services and allocating resources to tackle poverty. Each of these principles is presented with derivative organizational practices and a detailed account of their implementation. Applications By broadening the framing of critical practice as an individual, street-level endeavor, the findings offer policymakers and public social services professionals an organizational model that mitigates the negative consequences of current neoliberal and managerial policies around the world.

[1]  M. Krumer‐Nevo Poverty, social work, and radical incrementalism: Current developments of the poverty‐aware paradigm , 2022, Social Policy & Administration.

[2]  Grace Chammas Human Rights–based Practice in Social Work: The Case of Asylum Seekers in Canada , 2021, Journal of Human Rights and Social Work.

[3]  Yuval Saar‐Heiman Radical Hope: Poverty-Aware Practice for Social Work, Michal Krumer-Nevo, Policy Press, 2020, pp. 263. , 2020 .

[4]  Orly Benjamin,et al.  The struggle over the character of social services: conceptualising hybridity and power , 2020, European Journal of Social Work.

[5]  Shachar Timor-Shlevin Contextualised resistance: The mediating power of paradigmatic frameworks , 2020 .

[6]  Melissa C Florell Concept analysis of nursing activism. , 2020, Nursing forum.

[7]  Miki Malul,et al.  Service users' perspectives of social treatment in social service departments in Israel: Differences between standard and poverty-aware treatments. , 2020, Health & social care in the community.

[8]  Roni Strier,et al.  Moral Distress and Privatisation: Lost in Neoliberal Transition , 2020 .

[9]  H. Muurinen Service-user participation in developing social services: applying the experiment-driven approach , 2019 .

[10]  Merlinda Weinberg,et al.  Practising Ethically in Unethical Times: Everyday Resistance in Social Work , 2019, Ethics and Social Welfare.

[11]  P. Garrett What are we talking about when we talk about ‘Neoliberalism’? , 2018, Social Work and Neoliberalism.

[12]  Judith Taylor Gendering Israel’s Outsourcing: The Erasure of Employees’ Caring Skills , 2018, Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews.

[13]  S. Fargion Social work promoting participation: reflections on policy practice in Italy , 2018 .

[14]  Anna Gupta,et al.  Poverty, exclusion and child protection practice: the contribution of ‘the politics of recognition&respect’ , 2018 .

[15]  L. Boucher Radical Visions, Structural Constraints , 2018 .

[16]  I. Cummins Poverty, inequality and social work: The impact of neo-liberalism and austerity politics on welfare provision , 2018 .

[17]  Calum J. R. Webb,et al.  Social work, poverty, and child welfare interventions , 2018 .

[18]  Micheal L. Shier,et al.  Anti-Oppressive Organisational Dynamics in the Social Services: A Literature Review , 2017 .

[19]  Anastasia Gorodzeisky,et al.  Debt, poverty, and financial exclusion , 2017 .

[20]  Einat Lavee Low-Income Women’s Encounters with Social Services: Negotiation over Power, Knowledge and Respectability , 2017 .

[21]  Alpa Shah Ethnography? Participant observation, a potentially revolutionary praxis , 2017 .

[22]  Orly Benjamin Gendering Israel's Outsourcing: The Erasure of Employees' Caring Skills , 2016 .

[23]  M. Krumer‐Nevo Poverty-Aware Social Work: A Paradigm for Social Work Practice with People in Poverty , 2016 .

[24]  H. Schmid,et al.  The Performative Magic of Advocacy Organisations: The Redistribution of Symbolic Capital , 2016 .

[25]  G. Ruch,et al.  ‘Stumbling through’? Relationship-based social work practice in austere times , 2016 .

[26]  Orly Benjamin Gendering Israel's Outsourcing , 2016 .

[27]  Idit Weiss‐Gal,et al.  The ‘Why’ and the ‘How’ of Policy Practice: An Eight-Country Comparison , 2015 .

[28]  M. Dean,et al.  Perspectives on Neoliberalism for Human Service Professionals , 2015, Social Service Review.

[29]  Roni Strier,et al.  Introducing Anti-Oppressive Social Work Practices in Public Services: Rhetoric to Practice , 2014 .

[30]  J. Westwood Re‐Imagining Child Protection: Towards Humane Social Work with Families by Brid Featherstone, Sue White and Kate Morris Policy Press, Bristol, 2014, 192 pp. £21.99. ISBN 9781447308010 , 2014 .

[31]  Kate Morris,et al.  Re-imagining Child Protection: Towards Humane Social Work with Families , 2014 .

[32]  Ayelet Makaros,et al.  Comparison of the Social and Professional Ideology of Caseworkers and Community Social Workers in Israel , 2014 .

[33]  E. Teram,et al.  Overt and Covert Ways of Responding to Moral Injustices in Social Work Practice: Heroes and Mild-Mannered Social Work Bipeds , 2013 .

[34]  Jennifer E. Mosley Keeping the Lights On: How Government Funding Concerns Drive the Advocacy Agendas of Nonprofit Homeless Service Providers , 2012 .

[35]  Sanford F. Schram,et al.  The end of social work: neoliberalizing social policy implementation , 2012 .

[36]  M. Barnes,et al.  Subverting social policy on the front line: agencies of resistance in the delivery of services , 2011 .

[37]  E. Brodkin Policy Work: Street-Level Organizations Under New Managerialism , 2011 .

[38]  J. Aronson,et al.  Identity Work and Critical Social Service Management: Balancing on a Tightrope? , 2011 .

[39]  Roni Strier,et al.  Developing Anti-Oppressive Services for the Poor: A Theoretical and Organisational Rationale , 2010 .

[40]  M. Hughes,et al.  Organisations and Management in Social Work: Everyday Action for Change , 2007 .

[41]  S. Carr,et al.  Participation, power, conflict and change: Theorizing dynamics of service user participation in the social care system of England and Wales , 2007 .

[42]  J. Fook Critical Reflection and Organisational Learning and Change: A Case Study , 2004 .

[43]  J. Karabanow Making Organizations Work , 2004 .

[44]  D. Baines Pro-Market, Non-Market: The Dual Nature of Organizational Change in Social Services Delivery , 2004 .

[45]  P. Reason,et al.  A Participatory Inquiry Paradigm , 1997 .