TY - JOUR
T1 - Committed but constrained
T2 - Social workers’ perspectives on practice with children and families living in poverty
AU - Saar-Heiman, Yuval
AU - Zeira, Anat
AU - Thoburn, June
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2025/8
Y1 - 2025/8
N2 - Objectives: Knowledge about the actual components of social work practice with people living in poverty remains limited. This exploratory study examined perceptions of Israeli social workers of their professional values, daily practices, and organizational conditions, and comparing their personal commitment to poverty alleviation with their perceptions of their agencies’ priorities. Method: The convenience sample includes 84 social workers employed in local Social Services Departments (SSDs) across Israel. The survey, was developed through an international collaborative effort, was informed by an extensive literature review on social work with families living in poverty. Both closed and open-ended questions were analyzed. Results: Findings reveal a consistent gap between social workers’ ethical commitment to addressing poverty and their perceptions of their agencies’ emphasis on poverty-related values. Participants reported frequent engagement in bureaucratic and procedural tasks, which they viewed as essential yet limiting. Open-ended responses illustrate the emotional toll and practical constraints of working within resource-scarce, neoliberal systems. While relational values such as respect and empathy are widely implemented, rights-based and structural practices are less frequently employed. Conclusions: Social workers recognize and attempt to address poverty in their daily work, but institutional and organizational barriers—conceptualized through the lens of administrative burden—limit their ability to implement poverty-aware and rights-based practices fully. The findings underscore the urgent need for poverty-aware approaches at the policy level—approaches that address the structural roots of poverty while also transforming the working conditions of social workers. This includes fostering improved inter-agency collaboration to strengthen advocacy efforts and providing enhanced training that equips social workers to navigate the tensions between ethics, theory, and everyday practice.
AB - Objectives: Knowledge about the actual components of social work practice with people living in poverty remains limited. This exploratory study examined perceptions of Israeli social workers of their professional values, daily practices, and organizational conditions, and comparing their personal commitment to poverty alleviation with their perceptions of their agencies’ priorities. Method: The convenience sample includes 84 social workers employed in local Social Services Departments (SSDs) across Israel. The survey, was developed through an international collaborative effort, was informed by an extensive literature review on social work with families living in poverty. Both closed and open-ended questions were analyzed. Results: Findings reveal a consistent gap between social workers’ ethical commitment to addressing poverty and their perceptions of their agencies’ emphasis on poverty-related values. Participants reported frequent engagement in bureaucratic and procedural tasks, which they viewed as essential yet limiting. Open-ended responses illustrate the emotional toll and practical constraints of working within resource-scarce, neoliberal systems. While relational values such as respect and empathy are widely implemented, rights-based and structural practices are less frequently employed. Conclusions: Social workers recognize and attempt to address poverty in their daily work, but institutional and organizational barriers—conceptualized through the lens of administrative burden—limit their ability to implement poverty-aware and rights-based practices fully. The findings underscore the urgent need for poverty-aware approaches at the policy level—approaches that address the structural roots of poverty while also transforming the working conditions of social workers. This includes fostering improved inter-agency collaboration to strengthen advocacy efforts and providing enhanced training that equips social workers to navigate the tensions between ethics, theory, and everyday practice.
KW - Administrative burden
KW - Poverty
KW - Poverty-aware
KW - Practice
KW - Social work
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105005941704&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2025.108342
DO - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2025.108342
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AN - SCOPUS:105005941704
SN - 0190-7409
VL - 175
JO - Children and Youth Services Review
JF - Children and Youth Services Review
M1 - 108342
ER -