Contemporary practices in social work supervision: time for new paradigms?

Article


Hafford-Letchfield, T. and Englebrecht, L. 2018. Contemporary practices in social work supervision: time for new paradigms? European Journal of Social Work. 21 (3), pp. 329-332. https://doi.org/10.1080/13691457.2018.1446782
TypeArticle
TitleContemporary practices in social work supervision: time for new paradigms?
AuthorsHafford-Letchfield, T. and Englebrecht, L.
Abstract

Social work supervision is considered to be a core feature in the development of social work’s professional identity and practice and provides an important vehicle in which its outcomes are mediated and supported. Its key stakeholders may include people who use services, practitioners, and educators, those leading and managing services and organisations providing services. Good quality supervision has been cited as a potential pivot upon which the integrity and excellence of practice can be maintained. However, over the last two decades, much has been written about the impact of globalised social and political influences and economic changes impacting on social work. The status, purpose and epistemology of social work supervision in the literature have constantly been contested within this context resulting in its re-positioning to serve more conservative and restrictive environments. These developments have also given rise to the emergence of contradictory viewpoints about the key purpose of supervision, its empirical basis and the need for a cultural shift to address tensions between technicist approaches and relationship-based approaches. It is therefore timely to review and review and re-examine the state of knowledge, research and practice about social work supervision and to capture any new developments that might inform critical practice, professional development and wellbeing as well as its wider impact on accountability, effectiveness and work performance.
We are therefore really pleased to be the guest editors for this themed issue in the European Journal of Social Work, which has enabled us to bring together a very wide range of contributions capturing contemporary empirical evaluations of theoretical and practice models in supervision. These come from international perspectives in regions including West Africa, New Zealand, Singapore, Hong-Kong, USA, Canada; Denmark, Israel, England, Scotland and Ireland. The range of papers in this collection has adopted global perspectives as well as empirical accounts of experiences and practices in supervision which are both action oriented and reflective.

KeywordsSocial Work; Social Care; Supervision; International; Social Work Supervision.
PublisherRoutledge
JournalEuropean Journal of Social Work
ISSN1369-1457
Publication dates
Online23 Mar 2018
Print04 May 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited26 Mar 2018
Submitted10 Feb 2018
Accepted12 Feb 2018
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
Copyright Statement

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in European Journal of Social Work on 23/03/18, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13691457.2018.1446782

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1080/13691457.2018.1446782
LanguageEnglish
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