Special Issue Price: £20!
Guest Editors
Prue Chamberlayne is Visiting Senior Research Fellow in the School of Health and Social Welfare at the Open University. She has used biographical methods in a range of research and policy settings, and enjoys creative activities such as poetry and drawing.
Martin Smith is the Practitioner-Manager of the Buckinghamshire Social Services Out of Hours Emergency Team. He is particularly interested in researching and writing about social workers’ experiences of stress and fear.
Harnessing the inspiration available from the arts and the imagination brings to life sensitive and effective social work practice. Workers feel most satisfied while service users and communities are more likely to benefit when creative thinking can be applied to practice dilemmas. Drawing on contributions from Canada, England and Utrecht this special edition illustrates the transforming effect of creatively applied thinking to social problems. The first part of the edition considers how use of the self can be enhanced by analytic reflection and application to difficulties facing individuals and communities. The second part shows psychodynamic theory to be a valuable aid when thinking about issues faced by social workers facing threats and accusations, therapeutic work with children and restorative youth justice. The third part of the edition considers the implications of working with the arts in community settings – an ex-mining community in North West England, the Tate Gallery in London and the ‘cultural capital’ of Liverpool. Taken as a whole these papers combine to provoke thought of how the arts and the imagination can be used creativity to help both service users confronted by problems with living and the workers who attempt to get alongside them to think about these.
This issue recognises the invaluable inspiration that can be gained from the arts and the imagination in shaping social work with service users. Social work practitioners are shown to benefit from analytic and reflective thinking which enhances their understanding of themselves and the people they work with as well as the richness of applied psychodynamic theory to organisational and community settings.
Articles Include:
Where is the love? Art, Aesthetics and Research
Yasmin Gunaratnam
‘I thought I wasn’t creative but…’ Explorations of cultural capital with Liverpool young people
Paula Pope
The innovative rehabilitation after head injury: Examining the use of a creative intervention
Claire Smith
Arts based learning in restorative youth justice: embodied, moral and aethetic
Lynn Froggett
Smoke without fire? Social workers’ fears of threats and accusations
Martin Smith
