首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Networking Enforced – Comparing Social Services' Collaborative Rationales across Different Welfare Regimes
Authors:Janne Paulsen Breimo  Hannu Turba  Oscar Firbank  Ingo Bode  Johans Tveit Sandvin
Affiliation:1. Department of Social Sciences, Nord University, Bod?, Norway;2. Department of Social Work and Welfare, University of Kassel, Kassel, Germany;3. School of Social Work, University of Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Abstract:Collaboration and networking are ubiquitous, versatile features of social service provision in most Western countries. However, it is an open question whether networking means and entails the same across countries. Comparing regulatory frameworks in three jurisdictions representing distinctiveworlds of welfare services’ – Germany, Norway and Quebecthis article aims at eliciting the normative rationales that underpin and inform local service networks in child welfare and protection (CWP) systems. In Norway, where services are little diversified and largely insular, networking appears as a way of opening up for greater organizational plurality, within and beyond the public sector realm. In Germany in contrast, where services are highly pluralized and fragmented, networks are seen as an instrument for streamlining complexity. As for Quebecan intermediate case in some respectsnetworking is envisioned as a catalyst for aligning two co‐existing service streams and mitigating the child protectionfamily support divide. Interestingly, in all three places, networking is now being enforced through similar highly formalized, top‐down regulatory provisions, even though the intended directions of change differ markedly. This has implications for CWP policy as well as research on networks at large.
Keywords:Networking  Social services  Child welfare and protection  International comparison
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号