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Everyday resilience: narratives of single refugee women with children
- Authors:
- LENETTE Caroline, BROUGH Mark, COX Leonie
- Journal article citation:
- Qualitative Social Work, 12(5), 2013, pp.637-653.
- Publisher:
- Sage
This article offers a critical exploration of the concept of resilience, which often conceptualized in the literature as an extraordinary atypical personal ability to revert or ‘bounce back’ to a point of equilibrium despite significant adversity. Based on an ethnographic study among single refugee women with children in Brisbane, Australia, the women’s stories on navigating everyday tensions and opportunities revealed how resilience was a process operating inter-subjectively in the social spaces connecting them to their environment. The article focuses on the everyday processual, person-environment nature of the concept. It is argued that more attention should be paid to day-to-day pathways through which resilience outcomes are achieved, and that this has important implications for refugee mental health practice frameworks. (Edited publisher abstract)
Digital storytelling as a social work tool: learning from ethnographic research with women from refugee backgrounds
- Authors:
- LENETTE Caroline, COX Leonie, BROUGH Mark
- Journal article citation:
- British Journal of Social Work, 45(3), 2015, pp.988-1005.
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
This paper reflects on the wider potential of digital narratives as a useful tool for social work practitioners. Despite the multiple points of connection between narrative approaches and social work, the influence of narratives on practice remains limited. A case study of a digital storytelling (DST) process employed in a research project with a small group of lone mothers from refugee backgrounds is used to trigger discussion of broader applications of DST as part of everyday social work practice. The use of DST acknowledged women's capacities for self-representation and agency, in line with participatory and strengths-based approaches inherent in contemporary social work. The benefits of using DST with lone mothers from refugee backgrounds illustrate how this method can act as a pathway to produce counter-narratives, both at the individual and broader community levels. Documenting life stories digitally provides the opportunity to construct narratives about experiences of relocation and settlement as tools for social advocacy, which can assist social workers to ensure meaningful outcomes for service users. These propositions can serve to inform social work practices with people from refugee backgrounds and address some of the intricacies of working in diverse and challenging contexts. (Publisher abstract)