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Social work and advocacy with young people : Rights and care in practice Journal

By: Barnes, VivienneMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: British Journal of Social Work 2012Description: Journal articleISSN: 0045-3102Subject(s): Advocacy - Children | Social workers | Children's rightsDDC classification: Journals Online access: Open e-book (Ruskin students only) Summary: This paper draws on a qualitative study about the work of children's rights workers and social workers with looked after young people in the UK. It highlights some differences in their approach and in their attitudes to young people. Whilst they share many values, in theory, social work is closer ethic of care and interrelationship than rights work, which draws on an ethic of justice and individual autonomy. However, in practice, a more complex picture emerged. The study found that young people wanted professional workers who demonstrated that they cared about them as individuals and who focused on the process of the work. The study suggests that rights workers had a strong care ethic in their individual work with young people but social workers had difficulty in adhering to principles of care in a culture that encouraged them to manage young people's care rather than engage with them individually. There was also strong evidence that it could be detrimental to young people if rights workers adhered rigidly to principles of rights. The paper asks whether consideration of elements of an ethic of care alongside rights in both social work and children's rights work could benefit young people by encouraging a more sophisticated model of advocacy and by emphasising care in social workers' individual work with young people.
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<p>British Journal of Social Work Vol. 42 no.&nbsp;7 (Oct. 2012), p. 1275-1292</p> <p>Available in library.&nbsp; See journal shelves.</p> <p>Available online.</p>

This paper draws on a qualitative study about the work of children's rights workers and social workers with looked after young people in the UK. It highlights some differences in their approach and in their attitudes to young people. Whilst they share many values, in theory, social work is closer ethic of care and interrelationship than rights work, which draws on an ethic of justice and individual autonomy. However, in practice, a more complex picture emerged. The study found that young people wanted professional workers who demonstrated that they cared about them as individuals and who focused on the process of the work. The study suggests that rights workers had a strong care ethic in their individual work with young people but social workers had difficulty in adhering to principles of care in a culture that encouraged them to manage young people's care rather than engage with them individually. There was also strong evidence that it could be detrimental to young people if rights workers adhered rigidly to principles of rights. The paper asks whether consideration of elements of an ethic of care alongside rights in both social work and children's rights work could benefit young people by encouraging a more sophisticated model of advocacy and by emphasising care in social workers' individual work with young people.

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