Workshop delivered by Colin Turbett at the Shaping our Future: Relationships Matter Conference on 31 May 2019 at the University of Strathclyde. It provides a short history of CSW, brief case examples, and what it offers to todays practice: moving work upstream; potential for achieving greater job satisfaction; greater visibility and championing of social work's contribution; as well as better outcomes and cost effectiveness.
3. 1968 Act s12
"Social workers should be attentive to events and developments within the communities they
serve, anticipating needs that are likely to arise… The workload of local authority social work
teams should be planned to include activity designed to explore and monitor situations and
developments within communities they serve with a view to anticipating need and planning
ahead for the provision to meet it.” and "Social workers should be attentive to the plans and
activities of agencies – their own and any others… it might involve, for example, direct
negotiation, enabling people in the community to exercise direct influence, and/or referring
information to senior management level for action.”
Social Work Services Group, 1968
4. COMMUNITY SOCIAL WORK IN
SCOTLAND – what happened ?
Community development projects / Barclay report 1982 / NISW PRACTICE &
DEVELOPMENT exchange / various csw projects
Miners strike 1984-85
Tory government policy for the public sector
Clyde report / Jasmine Beckford / Cleveland / NHS Care & Community Act -
Reduction of QSW task to specialised assessments
1996 Local government reorganisation – reduction of power and influence of
social work departments
2000 on – “Integration” Agendas
5. Where are we now…?
The disconnect between policy & practice
…….or why what we train for and what we do might be different things
Austerity and its impact
Managerialism & “Risk”
Performance Indicator driven practice
QUESTION: Has social work become a largely reactive
rather then proactive profession?
6. Current policy-drivers - and need for change…
From Person-Centred to People-Powered!?
‘Doing with, not to’ – a human rights based approach
Individuals and families
Communities
Financial and legislative drivers
Community Empowerment (Scotland) Act 2015
The Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Act 2014
7. The Place of Community Social Work in
Scotland TODAY: 7 case studies from Iriss
www.iriss.org.uk/collection/showcasing-community-social-work
9. Rural Social Work’s Particular
Possibilities:
Sense of place and connection related to geographic location
Networking possibilities for practitioners
Lower turnover of staff: opportunities to develop local knowledge and
‘practice wisdom’
Potential for celebration of generalist and creative practice that
addresses social problems ‘upstream’ rather than ‘downstream’ moment
of crisis
11. Broad Characteristics of Community
Social Work
It (CSW) recognizes that people are entwined with and
inseparable from the social environment and that
strengthening community helps to solve individual as well as
shared problems;
It believes that knowledge of the wider world is empowering
so education is key to successful citizenship;
It sees collective as well as individual activity as valuable in
building social capital and avoiding marginalization;
It contends that community involvement is good for individual
mental health, reducing stress and its consequences
It sees collective activity as empowering for the individual -
this holds politicians and policy makers to account and so is
good for democracy.
12. The CSW Mindset:
The Community Orientated Practitioner………….
Thinks tactically – doing what she can with what she has –
power is not only what you have but what others think you
have
Exerts influence – at every system level there are many ways
to do so
Avoids romantic notions of community – they can be repressive
institutions and do not always contain the seeds of a better
future for their members
Wins respect for their efforts by being a good social worker
who supports and help individuals – whether adults suffering
disadvantage or children requiring protection from harm
Maintains the rage – but uses it wisely!
Managers perform an enabling and supportive role rather than
a controlling one concerned mainly with process
13. PARTNERSHIPS NOT PARACHUTES
ANTI POVERTY INITIATIVES ARE SET UP ‘…. rarely to encourage self-sufficiency.
Rather the opposite, each engagement and intervention creating more
dependency on outside resources and expertise, perpetuating the role of the
sector as opposed to gradually reducing it.’
Darren McGarvey – ‘Poverty Safari’
Community Social Work is a bottom-up activity - not a
top down one!
14. Examples & Ideas
Groups and activities that reduce social isolation e.g. – sport,
reading, art,
Clinics/Initiatives to address common social issues e.g. fuel
poverty, dementia,
Community ‘mapping’
Networking promotion