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TO  BLEND  IN  OR  STAND  OUT?

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TO  BLEND  IN  OR  STAND  OUT?  

Hospital  Social  Workers’  Jurisdictional  Work  in  Sweden  and  Germany      

             

   

Akademisk  avhandling  

Som  med  tillstånd  av  samhällsvetenskapliga  fakulteten  vid  Göteborgs     universitet  för  avläggande  av  filosofie  doktorsexamen  framläggs  till  

offentlig  granskning    

Fredagen  den  29  november  2013,  kl  10.15  i  hörsal  Sappören,   Institutionen  för  socialt  arbete,  Spängkullsgatan  25,  Göteborg.  

 

Fakultetsopponent  är  professor  emeritus  Lennart  Svensson,  Institutionen   för  sociologi  och  arbetsvetenskap,  Göteborgs  universitet  

               

 

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Abstract  

Title:      To  Blend  in  or  Stand  out?  Hospital  Social  Workers’  Jurisdictional  Work  in  Sweden  and        

    Germany  

Author:   Manuela  Sjöström   Language:     English  

Keywords:   cross-­‐national   case   study,   health   care,   hospital   social   work,   jurisdiction,   profession,   professional  association,  professional  subgroup,  subordination    

ISBN:   978-­‐91-­‐86796-­‐91-­‐4  

E-­‐published  at:  http://hdl.handle.net/2077/34196   ISSN:   1401-­‐5781  

 

This   dissertation   describes,   analyses,   and   compares   the   means   by   which   hospital   social   work   associations   in   Sweden   and   Germany   pursue   their   members’   professionalization   through  

‘jurisdictional   work’.   The   time   period   covered   by   the   research   is   1989   through   2008.   The   analysis   starts  from  the  observation  that  jurisdictional  work  represents  an  ongoing  effort  by  hospital  social   workers’   professional   bodies   to   establish   and   maintain   formalized   professional   jurisdiction,   both   internally  within  the  profession  and  externally  vis-­‐à-­‐vis  outside  stakeholders.  The  research  questions   guiding  the  investigation  focus  on  the  kind  of  activities  these  professional  bodies  perform,  and  the   way  in  which  they  are  performed,  to  promote  hospital  social  workers’  professionalization  in  the  two   countries   in   question.   The   question   will   also   be   asked   as   to   the   reasons   why   hospital   social   work   bodies  perform  the  specific  activities  under  consideration.  

This  dissertation  is  a  cross-­‐national  comparative  case  study  on  jurisdictional  work  performed  by  a   social  work  subgroup  operating  in  organizational  settings  where  social  work  represents  a  minority   occupation   subordinate   to   other   professional   fields.   The   research   materials   used   for   the   study   include,  in  the  first  place,  various  documents  obtained  from  professional  hospital  social  work  bodies   in  Sweden  and  Germany.  In  addition,  two  focus  group  interviews  with  board  members  of  two  of  the   associations  studied  were  conducted.  

The  theoretical  framework  used  for  the  analysis  and  comparison  of  the  empirical  data  draws  on   theories   of   the   sociology   of   professions   (Abbott   1988,   2005),   complemented   by   theorizing   on   compliance   in   voluntary   organizations   (Etzioni   1961)   and   on   social   identity   (Jenkins   2004).  

Additionally,  argumentation  analysis  is  drawn  upon  Karlsen  (2012).  

The  results  obtained  show  there  to  have  been  major  differences  between  the  jurisdictional  work   strategies   resorted   to   by   the   Swedish   and   German   social   work   bodies.   The   differences   mainly   involved   the   ways   in   which   these   organizations   supported   their   members,   related   to   their   social   work   knowledge   base,   positioned   themselves   vis-­‐à-­‐vis   their   trade   union,   and   concretely   sought   to   advance   formal   protection.   The   findings   point   to   both   internal   (i.e.,   associational,   related   to   the   organization’s   size   and   resources)   and   external   (national   context,   specific   healthcare   setting,   and   degree   of   subordination   to   other   occupational   categories   within   the   professional   context   and   the   specific  healthcare  setting)  factors  behind  the  differences  in  the  studied  social  work  bodies’  use  of   jurisdictional  work  strategies.    

Altogether,   two   different   jurisdictional   work   strategies   were   found   to   be   used   by   professional   hospital   social   worker   groups   operating   in   subordination   in   Sweden   and   Germany.   A   mimetic   strategy  was  used  by  the  Swedish  hospital  social  workers,  to  allow  them,  as  a  professional  group,  to   better   “blend   in”   with   their   hospital   settings;   in   this   case,   similarities   between   the   hospital   social   workers  and  their  working  environment,  including  other  professions  present  in  it,  were  emphasized,   especially   as   concerns   their   knowledge   base,   professional   identity,   and   disciplinary   affiliation.   In   contrast,  the  German  hospital  social  workers  relied  on  an  aposematic  strategy  stressing  differences   between   the   social   workers’   and   their   hospital   co-­‐workers’   knowledge   base,   professional   identity,   and  disciplinary  affiliation,  so  as  to  make  their  subprofession  “stand  out”  from  its  enveloping  hospital   settings.  

 

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