Personal Stories of Young Women in Residential Care: Health-Promoting Strategies and Wellbeing
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27724Date
2022-12-07Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Interdisciplinary social work practice produces and circulates narratives of young women
in residential care. The dominant narratives often present negative descriptions of this group, and
less attention has been paid to their resistance to these “big stories”. This study’s aim is to illuminate
this resistance of young women in residential care and to explore how they narrate their experiences
of being children at risk who have become women managing everyday life. This study utilises a
narrative approach and includes three selected personal stories: two from the participants and one
from the first author’s reflections on resistance. Through contextual analysis at the macro, meso and
micro levels, we focus on how personal stories can influence interdisciplinary social work services.
We found resistance to dominant narratives on the different levels in the chosen stories. Resistance
can create space to reconstruct and renarrate reality together and help understand the meaning and
power of storytelling and silence. Participants’ resistance can be a tool to rebalance the power between
social work practitioners and service users. Based on this analysis, we suggest that interdisciplinary
collaborative social work should emphasise service users’ personal stories to a higher degree and, in
this way, increase user participation in residential care.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Marlow MA, Sørly RS, Kaatrakoski HK. Personal Stories of Young Women in Residential Care: Health-Promoting Strategies and Wellbeing. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (IJERPH). 2022;19(16386)Metadata
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