Social in social: Analysis of social media discourses of Hungarian social workers about their profession
Social in social: Analysis of social media discourses of Hungarian social workers about their profession
Author(s): Éva Perpék, Zsófia Bauer, Zsuzsanna Réka Elek, Ágnes GyõriSubject(s): Human Ecology, Social Norms / Social Control
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: online discourse; content analysis; social profession; voice; prestige;
Summary/Abstract: The focus of the paper is how social professionals perceived their profession and its external judgment or recognition before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. We analyse social workers' comments in online professional communities on social media platforms. The relevance of the study lies in the fact that the investigation of the Hungarian social sector has received little attention compared to other human services professions, especially healthcare, and the analysis of social workers' online discourses is unprecedented nationally and seldom encountered internationally. The web-based content analysis covered a three-year period including the pandemic, and it is based on 6,692 online comments. According to our results, the entire comment stream is characterized by a mixed tone with a strong critical edge. The content analysis showed that Hirshman's theory provides a productive analytical framework to observe loyalty and voice and frame different levels of dissatisfaction and corrective mechanisms. Thus, we found four overarching phases and attitudes with moderate, strengthening, strong, and fading voice. Different intensities of loyalty and voice mirrored different stages and waves of the pandemic. Though the results of the content analysis resonate with previous research findings based on more conventional methods in many ways, they added further depth to domestic and international knowledge. While social workers' perception of their situation and prestige of social work was overwhelmingly negative, a method of coping with their burdens was through professional pride, solidarity, cohesion, self-compensation and compassion for their clientele.
Journal: Society and Economy. In Central and Eastern Europe ǀ Journal of the Corvinus University of Budapest
- Issue Year: 47/2025
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 280-298
- Page Count: 19
- Language: English