Social work with a child by streetworking: About discovering the potential and building relationships in the child’s social space Cover Image

Praca socjalna z dzieckiem metodą streetworkingu – o wydobywaniu potencjału i budowaniu relacji w przestrzeni społecznej dziecka
Social work with a child by streetworking: About discovering the potential and building relationships in the child’s social space

Author(s): Marta Kamińska, Katarzyna Ornacka, Dominika Beszłej
Subject(s): Education, Social psychology and group interaction, Developmental Psychology, Social Theory, Family and social welfare, Welfare services
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: streetwork; street children; education; child–adult relation;

Summary/Abstract: Streetworking is a way of working that allows a professional to get closer to the world of people with trauma experience. Their childhood and early years are filled with negative emotions – pain, anxiety, shame or withdrawal from social life. On the one hand, they are forced to live in enclaves of poverty and, on many occasions, take responsibility for the difficulties and dysfunctions of their biological parents; on the other hand, they try to find their own safe space where they can find peace and answers to the questions and dilemmas that arise ‒ so they take to the streets. Professionals, for whom the street has become a place of work, are ready to meet them, but they do not expect cooperation, they do not impose support, they are aware that the need for change must appear in a person who is in a situation of help. Such an approach makes them ‒ just as much as they do ‒ a tool in the process of building relationships, accompanying in games, conversations or resolving conflicts. The task of streetworkers is, therefore, to create a space in which it will be possible to show young people other possibilities of coping in life, motivating them to take up challenges, but not to teach or mentor. There are different rules of (co-)social life and a different hierarchy on the street. It has a specific charm, but it is a place where change happens continuously, and every new person is described as an enemy. A streetworker enters “someone else’s territory”, and that means he accepts the rules there and is open to the reality he will find “in the street”. Many times approaching the world of children (on) the street involves the use of unconventional methods such as provocation. Thus, this article is a reflection on the importance of the social worker’s profession in the context of streetworking.

  • Issue Year: 25/2020
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 59-77
  • Page Count: 19
  • Language: Polish