ponedeljek, 6. april 2020

Operation D: Negotiating the mandate (operations 12, relationship 2)


Although the mandate is a constant issue in a work relationship, it must be dealt intensely on the outset of it. The worker needs to be quite clear on his mandate and how he is implicated in the user’s situation – i.e. on his prior mandate from above. The user might be clear on what he or she wants or expect social worker to do, but often not. When such clarity is lacking the mandate has to be developed along the desires and goals of common action. Mandate and goals of action can be concubent and must be congruent. However, it needs not to be identical. There may be many actions involved in reaching the goals – not all of them to be performed by the worker.

User’s mandate and goals must be developed on the basis of the contradictions and tensions in the user’s Life-World (should not be imported from outside). They should be expressions of their (free) will. They should be in line with other three operations – they should reflect and respond to exigencies of Life-World, foreseen benefits of change and empowering for the user. The exploratory phase of the work alliance should be dedicated to getting an insight in the situation that would provide base for setting the goals and the subsequent action.

The expressed desires and set goals provide the direction and framework for action. To make it operative a plan or a “project” has to be made. These can be called personal plans, care plans, individual plans, individual unique projects, etc. Or, it can be simply a task to be performed. The idea is the same. Some plans are meticulously made, clearly stating what has to be done, who by, when, what time is needed, what means and with which resources. Others provide just general guidance and idea for action. But, even in such a case, some operative knowledge needs to build into them.

And this is when the actual work starts. The work in social work means mainly either providing services, or means and resources or construction of various (immaterial) arrangements that would improve life. The main form of work being the service model (services are instrumental also in procuring means or setting the arrangements, although it is not the final end of the work).

Goffman (1961) distinguishes between the repairing services and the services that create something new. Although there is a strong influence of repairing service model (via disciplines like medicine …) also in social work, the social work in its essence is a creating profession. It is creating new opportunities and possibilities, new arrangements, new life. While in repairing model, the assessment is needed of what went wrong, in social work the issue is what can be done. Instead of diagnostics there is planning. Instead of reaction to misdeeds, malfunctioning, a proactive stance is introduced – looking into the future and imagining it. Such modelling does not only enable totally different outlook, stance and approach, it also models the professional and user role in completely different fashion. User ceases to be an object of professional repairing action, the object is his or her reality and situation, and objective are his or her goals. Users become creators, together with helpers, of a new design and new arrangements – performers of new deeds in their life and world. Professional role of the social worker becomes very much like the one of architect providing the expertise in investigating the life-world, getting the idea about what to do, formulating a plan how to do it and accessing the needed resources and means for doing. Only creative service model allows real working relationship to develop.

 

Reference

Goffman, E. (1961), Asylums. New York: Doubleday & Co. (Pelican edition 1968).

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