Relationship and Participation: Relational Social Work in Residential Group Care
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Contributions to collected editions/anthologies › Research
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Participation in Residential Childcare: Safeguarding children´s rights through participation and complaint procedures. ed. / Claudia Equit. Opladen: Verlag Babara Budrich, 2024. p. 161-184.
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Contributions to collected editions/anthologies › Research
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RIS
TY - CHAP
T1 - Relationship and Participation
T2 - Relational Social Work in Residential Group Care
A2 - Equit, Claudia
A2 - Equit, Claudia
PY - 2024/7/15
Y1 - 2024/7/15
N2 - This chapter contains reports on violence and victimization experienced by children and young people. This can trigger experienced trauma. Please be aware of this when reading this chapter! This chapter examines the relationships and relational social work of professionals in different residential group care facilities based on the project “Participation in Residential Childcare” funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). The project examined how processes for participation and complaints, according to Art. 12 of the UN CRC, are organized in the residential groups in everyday life. One result indicates that informal processes – inparticular between professionals and children and youth, such as conversations in-between – have a significant influence on the realization of participation and the experience of full participation among young people in the residential groups. Therefore, the role of relational social work was evaluated in more detail, and there are clear connections between the relational social work and the implementation of participation in the residential groups. First, the chapter gives an overview of relationships and physical contact in residential groups.This is followed by a description of the project. The presented results highlightthe connections between organizational culture, which was investigated in theproject, and the respective relationships described from the perspective of theprofessionals and the perspective of the children and adolescents in the residentialgroups. It is shown that relational social work takes on a special significancein participatory idiocultures of residential living groups. Finally, the potentialsand limitations of the study of relational social work in residential groups andsafeguarding the participation rights of young residents are discussed againstthe background of the outlined state of research at the beginning of the chapter.
AB - This chapter contains reports on violence and victimization experienced by children and young people. This can trigger experienced trauma. Please be aware of this when reading this chapter! This chapter examines the relationships and relational social work of professionals in different residential group care facilities based on the project “Participation in Residential Childcare” funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). The project examined how processes for participation and complaints, according to Art. 12 of the UN CRC, are organized in the residential groups in everyday life. One result indicates that informal processes – inparticular between professionals and children and youth, such as conversations in-between – have a significant influence on the realization of participation and the experience of full participation among young people in the residential groups. Therefore, the role of relational social work was evaluated in more detail, and there are clear connections between the relational social work and the implementation of participation in the residential groups. First, the chapter gives an overview of relationships and physical contact in residential groups.This is followed by a description of the project. The presented results highlightthe connections between organizational culture, which was investigated in theproject, and the respective relationships described from the perspective of theprofessionals and the perspective of the children and adolescents in the residentialgroups. It is shown that relational social work takes on a special significancein participatory idiocultures of residential living groups. Finally, the potentialsand limitations of the study of relational social work in residential groups andsafeguarding the participation rights of young residents are discussed againstthe background of the outlined state of research at the beginning of the chapter.
KW - Educational science
KW - Social Work and Social Pedagogics
KW - right to participate
KW - Out-of-Home-Care
KW - Residential care
KW - Participation
KW - Children's rights
UR - https://d-nb.info/1310301158
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/5f29addd-0247-3790-88d6-2c3af591441e/
U2 - 10.2307/jj.17207117.10
DO - 10.2307/jj.17207117.10
M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies
SN - 978-3-8474-1879-5
SP - 161
EP - 184
BT - Participation in Residential Childcare
PB - Verlag Babara Budrich
CY - Opladen
ER -