Startseite Sozialwissenschaften 11 Social workers implementing social assistance in Spain: reshaping poverty in a familialistic welfare state
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11 Social workers implementing social assistance in Spain: reshaping poverty in a familialistic welfare state

  • Sergio Sánchez Castiñeira
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Abstract

This case study analyses some of the processes that are restructuring public social assistance in the inequality regime that emerges from the recent economic recession in Spain. It shows how social workers turn what could be an inefficient public program into an active social policy through a cognitive, normative and emotional approach. A highly qualified and vocational workforce compensates meagre institutional support and lack of opportunities by instilling in the new poor new knowledge, abilities and attitudes to access basic informal resources from the local context. However, social workers’ agency could eventually contribute to confine clients within the material and symbolic limits of an expanding grey zone with scarce opportunities and diminished well-being, between inclusion and exclusion. This research is based on semi-structured interviews (17) and focus groups (8).

Abstract

This case study analyses some of the processes that are restructuring public social assistance in the inequality regime that emerges from the recent economic recession in Spain. It shows how social workers turn what could be an inefficient public program into an active social policy through a cognitive, normative and emotional approach. A highly qualified and vocational workforce compensates meagre institutional support and lack of opportunities by instilling in the new poor new knowledge, abilities and attitudes to access basic informal resources from the local context. However, social workers’ agency could eventually contribute to confine clients within the material and symbolic limits of an expanding grey zone with scarce opportunities and diminished well-being, between inclusion and exclusion. This research is based on semi-structured interviews (17) and focus groups (8).

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  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. List of figures and tables vii
  4. Notes on contributors ix
  5. Acknowledgements xvii
  6. Introduction: social work and the making of social policy 1
  7. Social work, problem definition and agenda setting
  8. Social work as policy innovator: challenges and possibilities in the UK 21
  9. Social work, problem definition and policy change in the US: the case of sex-trafficked youth 37
  10. The voices of Italian social workers: from a pilot anti-poverty intervention to a national policy 53
  11. Social work interests in policy formulation and decision making
  12. Social reform in the US: lessons from the Progressive Era 71
  13. Social work academia and social policy in Israel: on the role of social work academics in the policy process 89
  14. Social workers’ collective policy practice in times of austerity: Italy and Spain compared 105
  15. Social policy and welfare movements ‘from below’: the Social Work Action Network (SWAN) in the UK 121
  16. Social work and implementation
  17. Policy work and the ethics of obedience and resistance: perspectives from Britain and beyond 139
  18. Systemic barriers to effective implementation of child protection reform in Israel 155
  19. Social workers implementing social assistance in Spain: reshaping poverty in a familialistic welfare state 169
  20. Layering, social risks and manufactured uncertainties in social work in Poland 185
  21. ‘A little more humanity’: placement officers in Germany between social work and social policy 201
  22. Conclusion: social work and the making of social policy – lessons learned 217
  23. Index 229
Heruntergeladen am 29.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.56687/9781447349174-014/html
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