Abstract
This paper discusses the importance of narrative learning and reflexivity at work with foreigners granted asylum. The discussed data is from 1 year duration fieldwork at NGO working with refugees in Lithuania. In this paper the examples from 4 narrative portraits of NGO workers are presented. It is argued that narrative learning is an interactive and co-constructed process and there is the need of awareness about the narratives and narrative learning, and how storytelling could be used for effective social work practice. The paper discusses the doctoral research data and explores the links between narrative learning and reflexivity. It is argued that reflecting about their practice critically, the workers can create new narrative identities and better understand and analyse their own identities, values, choices, practices and wider local and international contexts. Therefore, it is important to increase reflexivity and awareness of workers about various contextual factors and discourses, which might be influencing their narratives about their work and refugees, and further research on narrative learning and narratives of NGO workers.
Highlights
This paper is based on the doctoral research data about the narrative learning of NGO workers working with refugees in Lithuania
There is the need of awareness about the narratives and narrative learning and how storytelling could be used for effective social work practice
The examples from 4 narrative portraits of practitioners working in NGO with refugees were used to reflect on the links between narrative learning and reflexivity
Summary
This paper is based on the doctoral research data about the narrative learning of NGO workers working with refugees in Lithuania. In this article, using the examples from four narrative portraits of NGO workers, it is argued that narrative learning is an interactive and co-constructive process. There is the need of awareness about the narratives and narrative learning and how storytelling could be used for effective social work practice. Migration issues are frequently discussed in public debates; workers of NGOs require skills, training and increased awareness about their narratives and narrative learning process to become effective communicators and advocates for social justice. Interpretive and social constructionism paradigms, narrative and ethnographic data were used to create 4 thematically rich portraits of NGO workers working with refugees
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