TY - JOUR
T1 - Place and the uncanny in child protection social work: exploring findings from an ethnographic study
AU - Jeyasingham, Dharman
PY - 2016/7/6
Y1 - 2016/7/6
N2 - This paper presents findings from an ethnographic study of child protection social workers in Britain, which explored social workers’ experiences of and practices in space and place. It draws on data from interviews with practitioners and observations that were carried out as social workers moved around the places (the town, estates, streets and areas around service users’ homes) where they worked. It focuses on the significance of a particular affective experience, the uncanny, which social workers evoked in many of their accounts of these places. The paper introduces recent conceptualisations of space, affect and the uncanny before going on to consider data from the interviews. The following themes are explored: the relationships between the intimate spaces of service users' homes and the neighbourhoods in which they were located; social workers' accounts of feeling vulnerable in public and open spaces; social workers' experiences of feeling unsettled by apparently mundane features of neighbourhood spaces. The paper draws on critical engagements with the uncanny to consider its significance for child protection social work practice in Britain and its consequences in terms of social workers’ potential to work in emplaced and locally sensitive ways.
AB - This paper presents findings from an ethnographic study of child protection social workers in Britain, which explored social workers’ experiences of and practices in space and place. It draws on data from interviews with practitioners and observations that were carried out as social workers moved around the places (the town, estates, streets and areas around service users’ homes) where they worked. It focuses on the significance of a particular affective experience, the uncanny, which social workers evoked in many of their accounts of these places. The paper introduces recent conceptualisations of space, affect and the uncanny before going on to consider data from the interviews. The following themes are explored: the relationships between the intimate spaces of service users' homes and the neighbourhoods in which they were located; social workers' accounts of feeling vulnerable in public and open spaces; social workers' experiences of feeling unsettled by apparently mundane features of neighbourhood spaces. The paper draws on critical engagements with the uncanny to consider its significance for child protection social work practice in Britain and its consequences in terms of social workers’ potential to work in emplaced and locally sensitive ways.
U2 - 10.1177/1473325016657867
DO - 10.1177/1473325016657867
M3 - Article
SN - 1473-3250
JO - Qualitative Social Work
JF - Qualitative Social Work
ER -