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Digitalized Social Services : Formation of "new" street-level relations and professional compensation

Hjärpe, Teres LU ; Carlsson, Julia and Svensson, Petra M (2024) 5th Street Level Bureaucracy Research Conference 18-20 June 2024 p.1-21
Abstract
This paper investigates social workers' perceptions of their relationships with clients across three Swedish different municipalities. By selecting three municipalities at varying stages of digitalization, the study highlights differences in the descriptions of the relationship between social workers and clients, shedding light on whether, and if so, how, digital tools influence this relationship.

The decision to focus on the relationship in the study is based on previous research indicating that the relationship between the social worker and the client is central to clients´access to welfare services and the provision of public support. Consequently, the study serves as a basis for discussing whether and how clients' access to... (More)
This paper investigates social workers' perceptions of their relationships with clients across three Swedish different municipalities. By selecting three municipalities at varying stages of digitalization, the study highlights differences in the descriptions of the relationship between social workers and clients, shedding light on whether, and if so, how, digital tools influence this relationship.

The decision to focus on the relationship in the study is based on previous research indicating that the relationship between the social worker and the client is central to clients´access to welfare services and the provision of public support. Consequently, the study serves as a basis for discussing whether and how clients' access to financial assistance changes with the introduction of digital tools and whether there is a risk of digital exclusion.

The results of the study indicate that the division of labor resulting from digitalization can lead to increased distance between social workers and clients, and that digitalization entails a rhetoric suggesting that more responsibility should be placed on individual citizens. This may result in increased responsibility for individual clients to manage their own cases in relation to the authorities, potentially impairing clients' access to welfare services. However, this may not necessarily be the case. The study's results also show that social workers and financial administrators largely view digital tools as a complement, expanding accessibility, and that awareness of the risks of digital exclusion fosters sensitivity to whether clients need support. In other words, the study demonstrates how social workers and/or financial administrators work to compensate for the shortcomings of technology. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
This paper investigates social workers' perceptions of their relationships with clients across three Swedish different municipalities. By selecting three municipalities at varying stages of digitalization, the study facilitates a comparison of social workers' accounts. The comparison highlights differences in the descriptions of the relationship between social workers and clients, shedding light on whether, and if so, how, digital tools influence this relationship.

The decision to focus on the relationship in the study is based on previous research indicating that the relationship between the social worker and the client is central to clients´access to welfare services and the provision of public support. Consequently, the study... (More)
This paper investigates social workers' perceptions of their relationships with clients across three Swedish different municipalities. By selecting three municipalities at varying stages of digitalization, the study facilitates a comparison of social workers' accounts. The comparison highlights differences in the descriptions of the relationship between social workers and clients, shedding light on whether, and if so, how, digital tools influence this relationship.

The decision to focus on the relationship in the study is based on previous research indicating that the relationship between the social worker and the client is central to clients´access to welfare services and the provision of public support. Consequently, the study serves as a basis for discussing whether and how clients' access to financial assistance changes with the introduction of digital tools and whether there is a risk of digital exclusion.

The results of the study indicate that the division of labor resulting from digitalization can lead to increased distance between social workers and clients, and that digitalization entails a rhetoric suggesting that more responsibility should be placed on individual citizens. This may result in increased responsibility for individual clients to manage their own cases in relation to the authorities, potentially impairing clients' access to welfare services. However, this may not necessarily be the case. The study's results also show that social workers and financial administrators largely view digital tools as a complement, expanding accessibility, and that awareness of the risks of digital exclusion fosters sensitivity to whether clients need support. In other words, the study demonstrates how social workers and/or financial administrators work to compensate for the shortcomings of technology. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
social work, digitalization, professions
pages
21 pages
conference name
5th Street Level Bureaucracy Research Conference 18-20 June 2024
conference location
Copenhagen, Denmark
conference dates
2024-06-18 - 2024-06-20
project
Vad professionen gör som inte datorn kan
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
9ecdcc94-cb76-4c62-baef-5262e2e906c6
date added to LUP
2024-07-01 17:02:26
date last changed
2024-07-03 11:11:35
@misc{9ecdcc94-cb76-4c62-baef-5262e2e906c6,
  abstract     = {{This paper investigates social workers' perceptions of their relationships with clients across three Swedish different municipalities. By selecting three municipalities at varying stages of digitalization, the study highlights differences in the descriptions of the relationship between social workers and clients, shedding light on whether, and if so, how, digital tools influence this relationship.<br/><br/>The decision to focus on the relationship in the study is based on previous research indicating that the relationship between the social worker and the client is central to clients´access to welfare services and the provision of public support. Consequently, the study serves as a basis for discussing whether and how clients' access to financial assistance changes with the introduction of digital tools and whether there is a risk of digital exclusion.<br/><br/>The results of the study indicate that the division of labor resulting from digitalization can lead to increased distance between social workers and clients, and that digitalization entails a rhetoric suggesting that more responsibility should be placed on individual citizens. This may result in increased responsibility for individual clients to manage their own cases in relation to the authorities, potentially impairing clients' access to welfare services. However, this may not necessarily be the case. The study's results also show that social workers and financial administrators largely view digital tools as a complement, expanding accessibility, and that awareness of the risks of digital exclusion fosters sensitivity to whether clients need support. In other words, the study demonstrates how social workers and/or financial administrators work to compensate for the shortcomings of technology.}},
  author       = {{Hjärpe, Teres and Carlsson, Julia and Svensson, Petra M}},
  keywords     = {{social work, digitalization, professions}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  pages        = {{1--21}},
  title        = {{Digitalized Social Services : Formation of "new" street-level relations and professional compensation}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}