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Time reflexivity in social work interaction: A literature review on migration, time and temporality for social work practice

Hjärpe, Teres LU ; Tumminelli, Giuseppina and Ferraro, Giuseppa (2025) In Trabajo Social Global 1. p.115-115
Abstract (Swedish)
Introduction. In this article we explore how findings from existing research on time, temporality and migration can be relevant to social work practice and inform social workers’ interaction with migrating individuals. In social work literature, time mainly appear as part of the procedural knowledge as organizationally decided time frames and deadlines for work which is sometimes internalized and taken for granted and sometimes contested. Challenging this tendency to equalize time with the clock, we explore how time and temporality tied to other forms of knowledge may play a different role in social work and be a constructive tool in interaction with individuals who have migratory experiences.Methods.Findings are... (More)
Introduction. In this article we explore how findings from existing research on time, temporality and migration can be relevant to social work practice and inform social workers’ interaction with migrating individuals. In social work literature, time mainly appear as part of the procedural knowledge as organizationally decided time frames and deadlines for work which is sometimes internalized and taken for granted and sometimes contested. Challenging this tendency to equalize time with the clock, we explore how time and temporality tied to other forms of knowledge may play a different role in social work and be a constructive tool in interaction with individuals who have migratory experiences.Methods.Findings are presented from a configurative literature review in which in total 41 articles meeting inclusion criteria were analyzed and thematically synthetized into three main themes. Results.Findings in the first theme Time and powerserve to demonstrate how power operates with time as a resource, and how power relations are visible in the different ways social workers and migrants are governed by, experiencing and relating to time. In the second theme Recalibrating, migratory experiences and consequences are put in relation to life plans and prospects in a life course perspective. The literature on the third and most extensive theme Waiting identifies this state as being connected to both slowness, uncertainty and frustration, as wellas work, agency and hope. Theoretically informed by Barbara Adam’s dynamic approach to time—time as social, multifaceted, contextual and positional—we suggest that these findings can be useful for time reflexivityin social workers’ interactions with individuals with migration experiences. Discussion and conclusions.We find time reflexivity to be relevant for social work practice at four levels. Three of these levels have relevance for the direct interaction: the preconditional (reminding social worker ofpower asymmetry), the relational (time as a meaning making tool) and the operative (filling waiting time with meaning). A fourth level is the organizational, and it concerns the social workers’ work environment and working conditions. Beyond social work practice, time reflexivity can inform policy makers in strivings to create a transparent and dignified attendance of migrants within public organizations. We invite academic scholars and social work practitioners to give further empirical content to our proposed practice theory; time reflexivity. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Time; Temporality; Migration; Social Work; Reflexivity; Recognition.
in
Trabajo Social Global
volume
1
article number
e-ISSN 2013-6757
pages
139 pages
ISSN
2013-6757
DOI
10.30827/tsg-gsw.33403
project
Global social work and human mobility: comparative studies on local government and good social work practices in the euro-mediterranean region
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
e1e0c2fd-59b0-446b-9923-11f8155e6e21
alternative location
https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/tsg/article/view/33403
date added to LUP
2025-10-30 14:13:27
date last changed
2025-10-30 15:29:55
@article{e1e0c2fd-59b0-446b-9923-11f8155e6e21,
  abstract     = {{Introduction. In this article we explore how findings from existing research on time, temporality and migration can be relevant to social work practice and inform social workers’  interaction  with  migrating  individuals.  In  social  work  literature,  time  mainly appear as part of the procedural knowledge as organizationally decided time frames and deadlines for work which is sometimes internalized and taken for granted and sometimes contested. Challenging this tendency to equalize time with the clock, we explore how time and temporality tied to other forms of knowledge may play a different role in social work  and  be  a  constructive  tool  in  interaction  with  individuals  who  have  migratory experiences.Methods.Findings are presented from a configurative literature review in which  in  total  41  articles  meeting  inclusion  criteria  were  analyzed  and  thematically synthetized into three main themes. Results.Findings in the first theme Time and powerserve to demonstrate how power operates with time as a resource, and how power relations are visible in the different ways social workers and migrants are governed by, experiencing  and  relating  to  time.  In  the  second  theme Recalibrating,  migratory experiences and consequences are put in relation to life plans and prospects in a life course  perspective.  The  literature  on  the  third  and  most  extensive  theme Waiting identifies this state as being connected to both slowness, uncertainty and frustration, as wellas work, agency and hope. Theoretically informed by Barbara Adam’s dynamic approach to time—time as social, multifaceted, contextual and positional—we suggest that these findings can be useful for time reflexivityin social workers’ interactions with individuals with migration experiences. Discussion and conclusions.We find time reflexivity to be relevant for social work practice at four levels. Three of these levels have relevance for the direct interaction: the preconditional (reminding social worker ofpower asymmetry), the relational (time as a meaning making tool) and the operative (filling waiting time with meaning). A fourth level is the organizational, and it concerns the social workers’ work environment and working conditions. Beyond social work practice, time reflexivity can inform policy makers in strivings to create a transparent and dignified attendance of migrants within public organizations. We invite academic scholars and social work practitioners to give further empirical content to our proposed practice theory; time reflexivity.}},
  author       = {{Hjärpe, Teres and Tumminelli, Giuseppina and Ferraro, Giuseppa}},
  issn         = {{2013-6757}},
  keywords     = {{Time; Temporality; Migration; Social Work; Reflexivity; Recognition.}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  pages        = {{115--115}},
  series       = {{Trabajo Social Global}},
  title        = {{Time reflexivity in social work interaction: A literature review on migration, time and temporality for social work practice}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.30827/tsg-gsw.33403}},
  doi          = {{10.30827/tsg-gsw.33403}},
  volume       = {{1}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}