Translate Kesejahteraan Sosial Internasional: Globalization and International Social Work

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Nama : Difi Subagja

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TRANSLATE KESEJAHTERAAN SOSIAL INTERNASIONAL


Globalization and International Social Work
● More North American social workers do therapy than is commonly the case elsewhere.
According to a NASW membership survey in 2000 (cited in Reid and Edwards,2006), 39% of
the social workers worked in mental health, and Therapeutic social work has higher status then
welfare work with poor people. People using psychotherapy are often middle class people. In
addition, the higher status of other team members like physiatrist and psychologists might
colour social workers’ status. Much social work literature is based on therapeutic approaches.
This may contribute to social workers in welfare work not considering themselves doing ‘real’
social work.
● Gender plays a decisive role in determining social work’s status. Compared with the number
of social workers, males are overrepresented in research, in publishing and leading positions,
in many Western countries, social work practitioners are female, contributing to its low status
and pay. When social workers work with low status people, this also influences their status. To
belong to a low status profession influences the image social workers might have of themselves
and their clients.
The lack of clear distinctions between social work and other profession and disciplines
contributes to the unclarity of social work’s identity. Probation officers in Scotland and the
Nordic countries are social workers, while in England they have a separate education
programme. Youth work, considered social work in many European countries and the USA, is
a separate profession in the UK, with its own training and professional body. Likewise, welfare
workers are not members of the Australian Association of Social Workers even though many
work in childcare and social service agencies. Their education is similar to but shorter than
social work education. Welfare workers are a with social security and employment agencies.
The joint union for social workers, child protection workers and social educators have accepted
them as members.
Social work and social pedagogy on the European continent have been brought nearer
to each other, and currently many educational institutions award a joint degree. Historically
social work training in these countries was based on social sciences, took place in separate
schools, and prepared students for public welfare services with poor relief, social movements
and voluntary work. Social pedagogy was taught at universities, based on educational theories.
Its aim was to teach children and youth outside the school system to cope with life, and by
means of therapy establish harmonious relations between individuals and society (Frisenhahn
and Kantowicz, (2005). Pedagogy has a different connotation in the UK, having been a
technical word for teaching skills. However, in recent years, European social pedagogy has
been explored as a way of reforming childcare practice (Boddy et al,2006).
Social Work in a Political Context
Social work both depends on the political context in which it is carried out, and is used in many
countries to support government policy. Whether it supports the government policy or works
against it, the political context will influence social work’s identity. Social work’s legitimacy
in many Western countries derives from links to the welfare state (Harris,2003). The building
of the welfare states particularly profession in the Nordic countries as well as in Australia and
New Zealand. To fill new job roles with competent people, new schools of social work were
established (Askeland and Danbolt,2005). Through the welfare regime, social work becomes
applied social policy, and social workers are stakeholders both in defining social problems and
through their activities legitimize how to handle them. Therefore, social workers carry out
social, political and individualistic approaches in social work as well as create them.
Former communist regimes, like China, Eastern European countries and Ethiopia
among many had well-established social work before communist governments took over in the
1940s. Over the 30-40 years of the communist period, longer in Russia, different social work
was regarded as unnecessary, with social problems being dealt with through work units, or
through comprehensive state provision in, for example, childcare and housing. Different
Eastern European countries developed varying policies and practices and the position of social
work changed over time with some countries reintroducing some aspects of social work. After
the fall of the communist governments, social work has been rapidly re-established (Ramon
and Pathak, 1997).
Some former communist states in central Europe, are making a transition by adopting
a Western-style civil society. Poland, where social work education which started in 1925 and
was reintroduced after 1990 is an example. It is particularly seen as a tool for implementing
the renewed social welfare system (Szmagalski,2004). The social Welfare Act 1990 prescribes
the professional activity as assisting individuals and families as well as creating conditions for
their adjustment to the society. Szmagalski discusses dilemmas for social workers as social
work and social welfare values, as for example self-dependence and empowerment for
individuals and communities, do not correspond with values of an authoritarian Polish society.
Less well-educated people confuse material equality with egalitarianism, and many people see
social welfare as a state obligation alongside the government obligation to secure people jobs.
By being available to and associated with the welfare state, social work contributes to
maintaining social order. In the role, it has been accused of being used as a means to silence
suppressed groups. It does this by mediating through individualistic work the tension between
the citizen and the state (Dominelli, 1996; Harris, 2003; Lorenz,2005). Yu (2006) describes
how and individualist perspective permeated the Philippine social work during American
colonial rule. For social workers to propose structural explanations to social problems might
have invoked penalties. During Marco’s rule, social work flourished and by not criticizing the
dictatorship, rather supporting it through the professional journal, social workers legitimized
it. However, there were exceptions: some social workers promoted their views by working for
NGOs, a few joined the revolutionary movements, and educators and students took part in
protest actions and advocacy for the victims of the political system. This was not without threat
to own safety (Yu, 2006a). Further, Yu (2006) points out that to this end,
Globalization and Internasional Social Work
Filipino social workers have not criticized changes to the social services during the 1990s, the
decline in government spending and quality and the ideology behind it. Social work
practitioners and educators have been slow in criticizing the effect of globalization on Social
work (Dominelli, 2004).
Social work professionals, both responding to criticism of their social order role and
also as part of their commitment to social justice, have criticized established systems that
disempower people. Therefore, many countries have seen a trend for social work to become
less attractive to governments. Positions that earlier were mainly for social workers are open
to other professions that are less politically oriented, and new professions, like welfare and
care workers, have been established.
Organizational Changes
Economic changes of globalization and market orientation have made it difficult to maintain
the funding and socially liberal approach of welfare regimes in many countries. The strong
development of social work in the twentieth century has been linked to the emergence in the
welfare state. Neo-liberal political regimes, however, claimed a need for greater
competitiveness in globalized economies (Harris, 2003).
New Public Management
NPM was first introduced in OECD countries in the late 1980s (Cheung, 2002). Although the
impression in the West is that it has had a great impact, according to Pollitt (2002) it has only
been practiced in public services in the UK, USA, Australasia, partly in the Nordic countries
and Holland. However, Harris (2007) refers to several other sources who suggest a wider
extensiveness through international economic organizations. Form an Asian perspective,
according to Cheung (2002), NPM is a managerial solution to political problems. These
writers see NPM, which originates and continued by Clinton and Blair as the Third Way. The
American historical background is a political system valuing a large voluntary and a small
public sector, little state intervention and individualism and self-reliance. The assumption
behind it is that the best management existed in business and private concerns and should be
transferred to public sector. Thus, the society in which NPM was developed had a different
ideology and political organization than many countries in which it has been introduced
where the social sector was primarily public.
Global trends such as this ignore local contexts, while at the same time influencing
them. Where public services hardly exist. NPM should the have little impact. Its availability
as an idea gives it an impact in the South. It is part of the history and assumption behind
treating agencies and universities as private companies where clients and students become
consumers. Calling the trend consumerism disguises its political context. It is closely linked
to private well-being based on individual purchasing power, replacing systems built on
solidarity (Stjern0, 2005). The idea of consumerism is to listen to and adjust to people’s
needs. However, the result may be that purchasers’ voices are heard, while clients become
commodities.
Social Work’s Identity in Postmodern Agencies and Universities
NPM implies a change form political and professional leadership to management.
Professional discretion becomes subordinated to economic and managerial decision
(Newman,2002). This weakens trust in professions, and deprofessionalization takes place,
which is also a way of saving money. The system creates tensions between business-oriented
managements and professional and academic staffs. Such tensions concern the priority given
to:
● control, flexibility and devolution;
● social, political and economic agendas;
● the interest of various stakeholders like government, citizens, clients, communities
(Newman,2002) and educators and students.
Market mechanisms are pursued, including competition, contracting, privatization and
merger into bigger units. Performance-related systems are used for recruiting and payment.
Accountability and strict control of financial resources, personnel and results are practiced.
Simplified rating of outcomes is a common phenomenon. If an agency or university fails to
meet the performance criteria, they might be publicly compared and criticized and their
reputation damaged (Barnes,2007).
It has been difficult to assess the achievements of NPM, mainly because of scarce
data, according to Pollitt (2002). Successes have been measured in purely financial terms,
such as time and money. More qualitative indicators are lacking (Carter,2000). Although
there has been downsizing and staff reduction, it may be due to privatization or increased
expenses relocated to other sectors; for example, cutbacks in preventive childcare might
result in higher youth crime. Whether NPM is considered a success depends on who is asked.
Senior managers are more satisfied than lower level employees (Pollitt,2002), according to a
study, this is also the case for social work in the UK (Dominelli,2004).
Changes to Social Work Practice and Education
Changes due to NPM have appeared in both social services and social work education. Re-
organizations often occur as a response to the complexities and ambiguities due to
globalization and postmodernism. NPM is a rational system, and when it fails to manage
unpredictable postmodern processes and successes do not appear, it calls for re-organizations.
Often this fragments social service system, by re-organizing to achieve integration with larger
and politically more important services. The aim is to increase quality and efficiency and
reduce costs; such aims might in themselves be contradictory. ‘More-for-less’ is expected
(Harris, 2007: 3), even in situation with ‘increased need and diminished resources’ (Barnes,
2007:57). Cree and Davis’s (2007) study suggests that frequent re-organizations create stress
and uncertainty, imply new structures, new learning and adjustments, which cause
inefficiency and are costly. It demands flexibility in social workers. A growing trend in the
USA, called employment-at-will, is contracts where the employees accept being laid off at
any time without reason (Pine and Healy, 2007). Malcolm once worked in an area where,to
save money, large numbers of social workers in a major agency were allowed to retire early
at short notice. Their cases were left unsupervised, professionally a clearly
Globalization and International Social Work
Inappropriate decision, taken to achieve a financial target. Unpredictable working conditions
like this may disrupt relationships between clients and social workers, and inhibit the growth
of responsive professional practice. It may undermine work commitment and loyalty.
In a globalized postmodern era, both social work and its education are made insecure
by the influence of political and organizational changes. In many Western countries, social
work has become less visible when merged into bigger units, often dominated by health
organizations. An example form Norway is the merging in 2006 of the governmental-
financed and rule-based social security and employment services with the municipally
financed and discretion-based social services into the New Employment and Welfare
Services (NAV). Social workers had a strong role in the latter, not in the two former services.
In the UK, government-inspired childcare trusts formed unther the Children Act 2004 aim to
coordinate child and family social work with education, but similarly create much larger
organizations in which social work is submerged. While better, more integrated and
accessible services for the public is the overall goal, the underlying political purpose is to
provide for more clients with a reduced number of employees. A bureaucratic model seems to
solve the problems of what is defined as lack of efficiency, whereas the postmodern analysis
argues that the problems are of growing complexity and ambiguity. It remains to be seen how
rule-based or discretion-based services will influence each other in Norway or education-
focus and child and family focus services benefit from the change in the UK. It is important
to examine which stakeholders gain from new structures.
A parallel is taking place in higher education, where social work often disappears
into bigger units (Reid and Edwards, 2006), such as social or health sciences. The structure of
the educational institutions might have a decisive influence on whether social work education
focuses primarily on social sciences, social policy, law or political philosophy, rather than
learning materials relevant to practice in another way like ethics, communication,
relationship-building, co-ordination and collaboration. If social work merges with nursing,
healthcare might be emphasized, and in teacher training, social work might lean towards
education. Few social work professors have leading positions in universities (Lyons,1999).
Likewise, other professions achieve leading roles in the social services rather than social
workers. Thus, social work looses authority and the opportunity for independent
development, even though, as with agencies, such mergers may improve the cross-
fertilization of ideas between professions and shared training my improve collaboration in
professional practice.
Although the threatened death of welfare states in the West has not occurred, many
countries have experienced cutbacks in social services and fundamental changes to social
work. Contracting, competition and privatization are increasing, which converts social
services into a quasi-market in which services are treated as commodities, rather than as
responsive professional interactions. Social work and service provision shifts more to the
private or third sectors, which have been politicized with a quasi-market being a tool for
NPM, disguising the aim of saving public money. Packages of services suppliers. The ideal is
that the ‘services users’ should have better choice and more flexibility to meet their needs.
An effect is that.
Social Work’s Identity in Postmodern Agencies and Universities
The public services may disclaim responsibility, while claiming partnership and shared
commitment with users.
We argue that social work and education will never pay off economically. They are
an ‘investment’ in social cohesion; people can never be ‘profitable’. There should always be
a difference between private and business sector and the welfare sector. While the aim in the
former is a surplus for investment, the purpose of the latter is to invest in a country’s human
capital. Different success criteria are needed.
The parallel in education to service packages is modularization. Students become
customers who buy courses, and educators sell their products for the highest possible price.
This influences the educators’ identity and role. Universities do not receive state support
according to how many students they admit but for how many they ‘produce’. The quality of
the programme does not necessarily equate what ‘sells’. What is popular fluctuates, so that
small but high-quality courses might close down, and expertise built up over time might
quickly disappear. The output that decides the financial outcome for educational institutions
acting like businesses might be spending on good quality experiences for students. Finances
and prestige for universities are also influenced by the amount of research funding received,
publications in internationally highly esteemed publications and international involvement.
These are measured in accountability systems such as the UK research assesment exercise
and ratings of courses and universities in newspapers. Thus, academization, which is
necessary to consolidate social work as a discipline, goes hand in hand with the NPM
requirements.
Project organization in another way of adjusting practice to NPM requirements. It is
also a teaching method, similar to problem or inquiry based learning models. Using such
approaches, students then learn to handle issues in ways directly applicable in the field.
Projects in both practice and education are goal-and outcome-oriented. The problems are
limited; so are time, resources and people. This is claimed to be effective in teaching practical
skills in ways that are relevant to the work situation that students will experience, in the same
way that projects in practice focus attention, work and resources, however, in education, it
also means that students do not learn how practice might be better without resource
constraints. Organizing work as projects also implies acceptance of insecure employment and
services and less commitment form employers. Thus, the project model does not necessary
meet long-term challenges, as for example in development aid, described in Chapter 8. It is a
way of making a situation manageable in a complicated world, which fits well with the NPM
ideas.
With privatization and market orientation in the Western society, a business
terminology has influenced social work’s ideology and practice (Harris, 2003) as well as
education. Social work and university leaders have become managers. Social workers have
seemingly accepted without much opposition, to become entrepreneurs. As providers of care
packages they sell their products to costumers or as purchasers estimate the cost-benefit. The
language and concepts used influence the social workers’ identity. If we believe that people
create themselves and the world around them in interaction and through language, as the
social work practice according to the values underpinning the definition of social work.

Globalization and International Social Work


When complexity increases due to diversity, the NPM response is standardization as
a tool to minimize flexibility and direct contact (Harris, 2007). Technological development
has accelerated this possibility. However, efficiency through standardization should never be
a criterion for assessing work in human relationships. Success in social work often depends
on establishing rapport and support over time. This is a time-consuming process. Likewise, as
we argue in Chapter 9, social work students need face-to-face training to become qualified
for this kind of work.
NPM requires efficiency, and people may be related to as rational beings forgetting
about a holistic approach, which include emotions and body. Relationship-based social work,
which combines an individual and structural understanding of social problems, distress and
dysfunction has lost influence compared to procedural and legalistic responses to issues
presented by clients (Ruch, 2005). When situations become complex, ambiguous and
uncertain as in a globalized postmodern world, risk assessment and evidence-based practice
are required. However, this could be contradictory. Risk assessment might end up as
bureaucratic time-consuming procedures and delay an immediate, flexible and updated
response. Evidence-based practice may call for a modernist data collection inappropriate to
inform action in a postmodern era.
New patterns of accountability require frequent and time-consuming reporting, which
may compete with direct work with clients or facilitating students. Successes case
management teams. For example, the annual report on English social care services reports on
the number of assessments carried out by care managers, but not on the care that results.
Increased numbers may be regarded as efficiency while in fact it disguises sacrifices of time-
consuming counselling and treatment, or cross-cultural contacts.
Lorenz claims that social workers not only face changes in the social policy regime,
but also a ‘re-ordering of social relationships and attempt to model them in neo-liberal ideas’,
meaning here ‘less state, more market, more individual responsibility’ (Lorenz, 2005a: 93).
He suggests that social workers possibly unthinkingly avoid taking a political standpoint
concerning the changes and challenges in government welfare agencies. Instead, they then
either withdraw to privatization and therapy or accept NPM service delivery without
opposition. He emphasizes that neither of these two solutions responds to the ‘social’ in
public social work. Reflection is often proposed as a way improving practice, but the critical
reflection reviewed in Chapter 3 goes further than this, to address the political context.
Brookfield (1995: 8) claims that a reflection becomes critical when it meets two distinct
purposes, which may be used in social work:
● to understand how power is exercised in the processes on which we reflect.
● to question assumptions and practices that go against clients’ best longterm interest, but
that seem to make social workers’ daily lives and practice easier.
Therefore there is good reason to reflect critically on the professional practice of adjusting to
or escaping from the changes NPM requires. If social workers continue to respond as Lorenz
claims, then social work has stagnated and is not fulfilling its definition.
Social Work’s Identity in Postmodern Agencies and Universities
Postmodernism and NPM
Postmodernism is a Western phenomenon with a variety of interpretations informed by core
assumptions (Meinert et al., 2000); see Chapter 2. Among these are: individual freedom,
autonomy, choice, that right to personal expression, acceptance of diversity, and right to self-
fulfilment, to individual wellbeing and leisure time activities. These values only have
relevance in affluent societies (Groess,2006). Nevertheless. They fit well with the ideology
underlying NPM, which highlights self-reliance, responsibility, self-help and participation.
Postmodernism claims that there are no reliable truths or reality, knowledge is relative and
has to be deconstructed, by incorporating into our understanding of social phenomena who
created it and in what circumstances. Thus, for social workers, clients, educators and
students, uncertainties, ambiguities and risks characterize postmodern life.
Postmodern social work is similarly characterized by alternative practice models
form which to choose, based on variety of theories. In a constantly altering world where
changes and experimentation have a value in themselves, many social workers find that what
they learned as students, others might consider professionally or politically outdated.
Postmodernism claims that every culture has value. It challenges ethnocentrism
where we judge others’ opinions and actions from our own framework. Social workers must
balance accepting everything as valid on its own premises and cultural relativism. To avoid
ethnocentrism by knowing and acknowledging others’ cultural values is not the same as
accepting everything as equally valid. This accords with social work values, which demand
acceptance and understanding, and which provides for clear standpoints on issues.
Postmodernism does not contradict this, since it posits awareness of the alternatives.
Social Work under Postmodernism and Globalization
Values Conflicts
Postmodern and NPM values have displaced solidarity, the original base of many welfare
system (Stjern0, 2005). These values have permeated society, including social workers’ and
clients’ identities in the West. However, social workers deal with people who have not
adjusted or are unable to meet the requirements. Short-term social work models are used in
NPM agencies that might empower people individually, but fail to question structural and
political issues.
While social workers and many clients in the West have imbibed postmodern values,
in poor countries and communities and among poor people in rich countries, survival values
persist. According to Gross (2006). Such societies esteem traditional family ties, authority
and absolute more standards, show less tolerance to others, report low wellbeing and poor
health and are materialistically oriented. Gross’s commentary from American society has a
parallel in Szmagalski’s (2004) Polish analysis.
Globalization has widened the gap between rich and poor people and rich and poor
countries; see Chapter 2. Reduced public services and benefits make some people dependent
on temporary solutions such as soup kitchens in big cities in rich.

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