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Håkan Jönson, foto Johan Persson.

Håkan Jönson

Professor

Håkan Jönson, foto Johan Persson.

Enabling positive framings of stigmatised settings : a neglected responsibility for social work

Author

  • Tove Harnett
  • Håkan Jönson

Summary, in English

Settings in social work may be associated with spatial stigma. This study uses the case of a highly stigmatised setting to investigate ways of ascribing positive characteristics to tainted contexts. Guided by symbolic interactionism, the aim is to analyse how residents in ‘wet’ eldercare facilities manage to view these in a positive light. Wet eldercare facilities are designed for older people with long-term substance use problems, where abstinence is abandoned for well-being. Forty-two residents of four such facilities were interviewed, revealing how the hybrid status of these places enabled residents to frame their situation as being ‘in the right place’, but for different reasons. Some framed the place as a care home, others as an ordinary flat. Both frames were made credible by the formal hybrid organisation: Swedish wet eldercare facilities are part of the eldercare system, and residents’ rooms are formally regarded as flats. The study suggests that it is social work’s (often neglected) responsibility to counter spatial stigma and improve residents’ sense of dignity. Based on promising practices in the Swedish system, the study presents three strategies that enable residents in nominally tainted settings to ascribe positive characteristics to the place where they live.

Department/s

  • Ageing and Eldercare
  • School of Social Work
  • Addiction Research

Publishing year

2022

Language

English

Pages

238-249

Publication/Series

European Journal of Social Work

Volume

25

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Routledge

Topic

  • Social Work

Keywords

  • eldercare
  • Harm reduction
  • older people

Status

Published

Project

  • Specialist eldercare for people with substance abuse and complex needs: Promising practices or institutionalized ageism?

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1369-1457