Abstract

Research into child and family social work has largely stopped short of getting close enough to practice to produce understandings of what goes on between social workers and service users. This is despite the known problems in social worker engagement with children in cases where they have died. This paper outlines and analyses the methods used in a study of social work encounters with children and families on home visits where there were child protection concerns. It illustrates how mobile methods of walking and driving interviews were conducted with social workers on the way to and from home visits, and how the ethnography involved participant observation and audio-recordings ofthe interactions between social workers, children and parents in the home, re¬vealing the talk, actions and experiences that occurred. Social workers often moved around the home, especially to interview children on their own in their bedrooms, and the paper shows how ways were found to stay close enough to observe these sensitive encounters within families’ most intimate spaces, while ensuring the research remained ethical. Ethnographic and mobile methods produce vital data that advance new understandings of everyday social work practices and service users’ experiences and of dynamics that are similar to breakdowns in practice that have occurred in child death cases.

Highlights

  • Ethnographic and mobile methods produce vital data that advance new understandings of everyday social work practices and service users’ experiences and of dynamics that are similar to breakdowns in practice that have occurred in child death cases

  • A large research literature exists on child and family social work, surprisingly little of this has been applied to producing knowledge of what goes on when social workers and children and families are face to face

  • A key way such research can be done is by observing encounters between social workers and service users as they naturally occur—the method known as ethnography (Hammersley and Atkinson, 2007)

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Summary

Introduction

A large research literature exists on child and family social work, surprisingly little of this has been applied to producing knowledge of what goes on when social workers and children and families are face to face. The researcher getting as close as it is possible to get to social work practice enables some things to be seen and experienced that otherwise would be missed (Longhofer and Floersch, 2012) This claim is based on my experience of conducting participant observations of social worker – service user interactions on home visits, the first phase of which I began doing in the late 2000s, which provided the basis for beginning to set out what social workers do and to theorise it (Ferguson, 2011a) and developing methods for researching it (Ferguson, 2011b). I will show how my research study attempted to negotiate them

The research study
Researching social work on the move
Researching practice up close in the home
Conclusion
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