Social Work, Young Migrants and the Act of Listening : Becoming an Unaccompanied Child (Routledge Advances in Social Work)

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Social Work, Young Migrants and the Act of Listening : Becoming an Unaccompanied Child (Routledge Advances in Social Work)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 178 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780367543419
  • DDC分類 362.7791253094

Full Description

This book is about 20 young unaccompanied refugees who have sought refuge in Europe and how they experience and try to navigate their new situations, including their contacts with social workers, friends and family members left behind.

The book contains stories of powerlessness and frustration from being held under suspicion, from meeting authorities and abstract people of power from "the system," or from constantly being categorized in a static category of "the unaccompanied child." It contains stories of human meetings characterized by thoughtfulness, reciprocity and listening. This book also explores the experiences of meeting social workers as a young migrant in Sweden. The narratives depict how social workers can often reproduce powerlessness and frustration among the young people, but also how there are those social workers who provide something else through the act of listening. By extension, this is a book about society, about how important it can be to reframe people and to listen to their stories, needs and wills.

Demonstrating the importance of listening to the stories of young refuges, this title will appeal to students, researchers, community workers and social workers interested in migration, race and ethnicity, youth studies, social work, sociology, anthropology, pedagogy and health.

Contents

1. Malmö Central Station is filled with life.  2. Those who come from the outside.  3. Landing, traveling and being stopped.  4. Dancing alone or together.  5. Trying to maintain proximity at a distance.  6. Planning for and getting to the future.  7. "The unaccompanied" as a potential threat.  8. Social Work and the creation of distance.  9. From framing to reframing in encounters with unaccompanied minors.  10. Conclusion: Between recognition and unrecognition

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