Entanglements with offices, information systems, laptops and phones: how agile working is influencing social workers’ interactions with each other and with families
Autor: | Dharman Jeyasingham |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Health (social science)
Social work business.industry 05 social sciences Public sector Flexibility (personality) Public relations ethnography 0506 political science Work (electrical) Child protection Ethnography technology 050602 political science & public administration Information system 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences business Social Sciences (miscellaneous) 050104 developmental & child psychology Agile software development |
Zdroj: | Jeyasingham, D 2020, ' Entanglements with offices, information systems, laptops and phones: how agile working is influencing social workers’ interactions with each other and with families ', Qualitative Social Work, vol. 19, no. 3, pp. 337-358 . https://doi.org/10.1177/1473325020911697 |
DOI: | 10.1177/1473325020911697 |
Popis: | Agile working (flexibility about where and when practitioners do their work) is increasingly common across public sector social work, but there has been little research about how practitioners engage with it or its impacts on communication between social workers, their colleagues and the families with whom they work. This article presents findings from an ethnographic study of a children’s safeguarding social work team in an English local authority who were engaged in agile working. It draws on data from observations, local authority documents, semi-structured interviews, participant research diaries, participants’ photographs and the researcher’s photographs taken during fieldwork. An analytical frame drawing on Henri Lefebvre’s concept of spatial dialectics and Wanda Orlikowski’s concept of sociomateriality is used to identify how agile working involves entanglements of practitioners and families with restructured office spaces, digital information systems and mobile devices such as convertible laptop–tablet computers and mobile phones. Innovations such as these are commonly understood as promoting more effective and transparent social work practice, but the study’s data show that entanglements between workspaces, digital devices and people in practice are having multiple effects, producing new hierarchies of belonging in space, shaping what can be communicated, and the ways it can be presented and received. The article argues for critical attention to the role of material space in digital and place-based innovations in social work practice. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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