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Familjevård, Kultur och Etnicitet: rekryteringsprocessen ur ett kulturellt och etniskt perspektiv

Lundberg, Titti and Sandgren, Nicolette (2007)
School of Social Work
Abstract
Children are said to be the future of our society. Hence, how we take care of our children is a cause of concern. This is evident in much of the social work that is carried out in Sweden. One of the times when we find children to be the most vulnerable is when they, for different reasons, are separated from their biological families and placed in foster care. Based on the fact that Sweden over the last century has experienced an increased immigration intake we wanted to take a closer look on how this change of the population dynamics has influenced foster care in the country. Our aim with this paper is to investigate how social workers concerned with recruiting foster families for children look upon culture and ethnicity as a determinatory... (More)
Children are said to be the future of our society. Hence, how we take care of our children is a cause of concern. This is evident in much of the social work that is carried out in Sweden. One of the times when we find children to be the most vulnerable is when they, for different reasons, are separated from their biological families and placed in foster care. Based on the fact that Sweden over the last century has experienced an increased immigration intake we wanted to take a closer look on how this change of the population dynamics has influenced foster care in the country. Our aim with this paper is to investigate how social workers concerned with recruiting foster families for children look upon culture and ethnicity as a determinatory factor of where and with whom to place a specific child. Due to the limitations of this paper we have based our study on one city only, Malmö. Wanting to find out in depth how social workers reasoned we chose a qualitative method, and more specifically semistructured interviews. The empirical material of the study was based on interviews with nine social workers from eight different districts in the chosen city. Theories used to analyse the collected empirical material are system theory and ecological development theory. Our research concluded that despite changes in society, the social workers saw no major changes in their work. They consider cultural and ethnical heritage to be an important aspect of the recruitment process in foster care, but only one of many to be considered. Nevertheless they all admit lacking cultural knowledge. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Lundberg, Titti and Sandgren, Nicolette
supervisor
organization
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
foster care, culture, ethnicity, immigrants, Social problems and welfare, national insurance, Sociala problem, social välfärd, socialförsäkring
language
Swedish
id
1321685
date added to LUP
2007-02-20 00:00:00
date last changed
2007-02-20 00:00:00
@misc{1321685,
  abstract     = {{Children are said to be the future of our society. Hence, how we take care of our children is a cause of concern. This is evident in much of the social work that is carried out in Sweden. One of the times when we find children to be the most vulnerable is when they, for different reasons, are separated from their biological families and placed in foster care. Based on the fact that Sweden over the last century has experienced an increased immigration intake we wanted to take a closer look on how this change of the population dynamics has influenced foster care in the country. Our aim with this paper is to investigate how social workers concerned with recruiting foster families for children look upon culture and ethnicity as a determinatory factor of where and with whom to place a specific child. Due to the limitations of this paper we have based our study on one city only, Malmö. Wanting to find out in depth how social workers reasoned we chose a qualitative method, and more specifically semistructured interviews. The empirical material of the study was based on interviews with nine social workers from eight different districts in the chosen city. Theories used to analyse the collected empirical material are system theory and ecological development theory. Our research concluded that despite changes in society, the social workers saw no major changes in their work. They consider cultural and ethnical heritage to be an important aspect of the recruitment process in foster care, but only one of many to be considered. Nevertheless they all admit lacking cultural knowledge.}},
  author       = {{Lundberg, Titti and Sandgren, Nicolette}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Familjevård, Kultur och Etnicitet: rekryteringsprocessen ur ett kulturellt och etniskt perspektiv}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}