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Seven - Sociological social work: a case example

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 April 2022

Ian Shaw
Affiliation:
University of York
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Summary

This penultimate chapter will take up a theme that follows from Chapters Five and Six. Whereas there we think of social work in relation to time and place, this chapter will consider social work in relation to other fields and disciplines. The underlying assumption – that I will set out in straightforward ways – is that social work research and practice have much to gain by welcoming their relationship to other bordering fields. The example I will give is sociology. I will deal with the issues in three ways.

First, I will outline the scope and nature of what sociological social work might encompass.

Second, I will look at how sociologists and social workers have understood their relationship. To ensure readers can gain from this material, the heart of this section will be an introduction to a series of sociologists who, in my view, are doing work that treats social work as of sociological interest.

Third, I will outline a case I have developed in detail elsewhere regarding ways in which the methods of inquiry that are associated with qualitative sociological research are open to ‘translation’ such that they may become a form of practice.

In an important way, this chapter stands apart from other chapters in this book. The broad aim of the book is to make accessible ideas and debates that in most respects have taken place between some social work scholars and members of related communities and disciplines. The book reaches for distinctiveness based on the level of writing and audience rather than by bringing in completely new ideas and arguments. This chapter continues in this vein, but offers a position that has had very little attention in the social work literature and has not impinged on social work practice beyond the margins. I will pursue an argument for sociological social work, while recognising the relative strangeness of the term.

The chapter follows closely the outline in the abstract. After outlining the scope and nature of what sociological social work might encompass, we turn attention to how sociologists and social workers have understood their relationship. The chapter closes with examples of ways in which the methods of inquiry that are associated with qualitative sociological research are open to ‘translation’ such that they may become a form of practice.

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Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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