Social work under Covid-19 : a thematic analysis of articles in 'SW2020 under Covid-19 Magazine'
Sen, Robin and Kerr, Christian and MacIntyre, Gillian and Featherstone, Brid and Gupta, Anna and Quinn-Aziz, Abyd (2021) Social work under Covid-19 : a thematic analysis of articles in 'SW2020 under Covid-19 Magazine'. British Journal of Social Work, 52 (3). pp. 1765-1782. bcab094. ISSN 0045-3102 (https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcab094)
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Abstract
This paper presents a thematic analysis of 100 articles which appeared in SW2020 under Covid 19 online magazine, authored by people with lived experience, practitioners, students and academics. The magazine was founded by an editorial collective of the authors of this paper and ran as a free online magazine during the period of the first UK Covid lockdown period (March – July 2020). It contained a far higher proportion of submissions from the first three groups of contributors, above, than traditional journals. The analysis is organised under four emergent themes: Hidden populations; Life, loss and hope; Practising differently; and, Policy and system change. The paper concludes by describing the apparent divergence between accounts which primarily suggest evidence of improved working relationships between social workers and those they serve via digital practices, and accounts suggesting that an increasingly investigative, authoritarian social work practice has emerged under Covid.-19 We argue that, notwithstanding this divergence, an upsurge in activism within social work internationally during the pandemic period provides a basis for believing that the emergence of a community-situated, socially engaged social work is possible post-pandemic.
ORCID iDs
Sen, Robin, Kerr, Christian, MacIntyre, Gillian ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4247-1276, Featherstone, Brid, Gupta, Anna and Quinn-Aziz, Abyd;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 76554 Dates: DateEvent20 May 2021Published5 April 2021AcceptedSubjects: Social Sciences
Medicine > Public aspects of medicine > Public health. Hygiene. Preventive MedicineDepartment: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) > Social Work and Social Policy > Social Work and Social Policy Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 25 May 2021 09:16 Last modified: 30 Nov 2024 01:18 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/76554