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The family-market wall contested : social workers managing contradictory ideals in marketised foster care

Hjärpe, Teres LU (2025) In Emotions and Society p.1-18
Abstract (Swedish)
The task of assessing and contracting foster parents, usually undertaken by a child protection social worker, is increasingly framed by market arrangements. This article explores, from the perspective of social workers, whether and how this context poses challenges for foster care considerations. Theoretically informed by the sociology of emotions, the following research questions are explored: how do social workers relate to culturally rooted boundaries between the family and market spheres in their interactions with foster parents? How are right and wrong motives for foster parenting constructed in social workers’ retellings of such interactions? The findings are based on abductively processed ethnographic data (observations and... (More)
The task of assessing and contracting foster parents, usually undertaken by a child protection social worker, is increasingly framed by market arrangements. This article explores, from the perspective of social workers, whether and how this context poses challenges for foster care considerations. Theoretically informed by the sociology of emotions, the following research questions are explored: how do social workers relate to culturally rooted boundaries between the family and market spheres in their interactions with foster parents? How are right and wrong motives for foster parenting constructed in social workers’ retellings of such interactions? The findings are based on abductively processed ethnographic data (observations and interviews) with social workers and managers. The social workers’ reflections reveal ambivalence and contradiction. On a normative level, they reinforce cultural boundaries between the family and market spheres, keeping ideals of good parenting separate from market logic. Yet, they face situations in which it is difficult to defend this division, and market arrangements can even be perceived as beneficial. These themes provide an empirical illustration of emotional ambivalence resulting from blurred boundaries between the private and public spheres in neoliberal modernity. As emotion norms directly affect the assessment of foster parents, the sociology of emotions can contribute to social workers’ reflections on the sources of tension in foster care. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
family-market wall; emotion norms; child protection; foster parenting
in
Emotions and Society
pages
18 pages
publisher
Policy Press
ISSN
2631-6897
DOI
10.1332/26316897Y2025D000000071
project
Socialsekreterares bevekelsegrunder vid beslut om placeringar av barn och unga
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
d6ba99f2-dbd3-44f3-bd78-8180cc32d695
date added to LUP
2025-06-02 11:39:16
date last changed
2025-06-02 13:21:54
@article{d6ba99f2-dbd3-44f3-bd78-8180cc32d695,
  abstract     = {{The task of assessing and contracting foster parents, usually undertaken by a child protection social worker, is increasingly framed by market arrangements. This article explores, from the perspective of social workers, whether and how this context poses challenges for foster care considerations. Theoretically informed by the sociology of emotions, the following research questions are explored: how do social workers relate to culturally rooted boundaries between the family and market spheres in their interactions with foster parents? How are right and wrong motives for foster parenting constructed in social workers’ retellings of such interactions? The findings are based on abductively processed ethnographic data (observations and interviews) with social workers and managers. The social workers’ reflections reveal ambivalence and contradiction. On a normative level, they reinforce cultural boundaries between the family and market spheres, keeping ideals of good parenting separate from market logic. Yet, they face situations in which it is difficult to defend this division, and market arrangements can even be perceived as beneficial. These themes provide an empirical illustration of emotional ambivalence resulting from blurred boundaries between the private and public spheres in neoliberal modernity. As emotion norms directly affect the assessment of foster parents, the sociology of emotions can contribute to social workers’ reflections on the sources of tension in foster care.}},
  author       = {{Hjärpe, Teres}},
  issn         = {{2631-6897}},
  keywords     = {{family-market wall; emotion norms; child protection; foster parenting}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  pages        = {{1--18}},
  publisher    = {{Policy Press}},
  series       = {{Emotions and Society}},
  title        = {{The family-market wall contested : social workers managing contradictory ideals in marketised foster care}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/26316897Y2025D000000071}},
  doi          = {{10.1332/26316897Y2025D000000071}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}