This article explores a number-based comparative logic unfolding around a particular kind of meeting in a social work setting: a daily and short gathering referred to as a “pulse meeting”. At such meetings, staff gather around a whiteboard visualizing individual statistics in terms of the number of client meetings performed or assistance decisions made. The statistics function as a basis for further division of work tasks. As such, it is a particular way of representing what social workers do at work. Ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the social services revealed how such openly exposed individual performance and the related number-based comparative logic can trump alternative logics ranging from the overall collective performance, compet...
As a practitioner, a manager and a scientist in social work for 40 years, I am still intrigued by th...
Evaluating effectiveness is of primary concern to social work practice; resources will always be lim...
In this article the authors consider how effective social work has been in terms of evidence-based p...
This article explores a number-based comparative logic unfolding around a particular kind of meeting...
This article explores a number-based comparative logic unfolding around a particular kind of meeting...
In the name of transparency and accountability, numbers and statistics have gained importance as ind...
“Commensuration” as an analytic framework for studying the expanding measuring culture in social wor...
Since the 1990s, social work has been subject to requirements for monitoring and quality assurance. ...
In the name of efficiency, performance measurement has gained traction in public welfare organizatio...
Since the 1990s, social work has been subject to requirements for monitoring and quality assurance. ...
This article examines how social workers and managers perceive meaningful work and expertise in six ...
The article focuses on social workers’ reflections on their own professional practice in conversatio...
Michael Anthony Lewis, Social Workers Count: Numbers and Social Issues. Oxford University Press (201...
Digital work has become part of social workers’ daily routines in countries where digitalisation is ...
Social work once started as volunteering and then turned into a paid profession. At present many cou...
As a practitioner, a manager and a scientist in social work for 40 years, I am still intrigued by th...
Evaluating effectiveness is of primary concern to social work practice; resources will always be lim...
In this article the authors consider how effective social work has been in terms of evidence-based p...
This article explores a number-based comparative logic unfolding around a particular kind of meeting...
This article explores a number-based comparative logic unfolding around a particular kind of meeting...
In the name of transparency and accountability, numbers and statistics have gained importance as ind...
“Commensuration” as an analytic framework for studying the expanding measuring culture in social wor...
Since the 1990s, social work has been subject to requirements for monitoring and quality assurance. ...
In the name of efficiency, performance measurement has gained traction in public welfare organizatio...
Since the 1990s, social work has been subject to requirements for monitoring and quality assurance. ...
This article examines how social workers and managers perceive meaningful work and expertise in six ...
The article focuses on social workers’ reflections on their own professional practice in conversatio...
Michael Anthony Lewis, Social Workers Count: Numbers and Social Issues. Oxford University Press (201...
Digital work has become part of social workers’ daily routines in countries where digitalisation is ...
Social work once started as volunteering and then turned into a paid profession. At present many cou...
As a practitioner, a manager and a scientist in social work for 40 years, I am still intrigued by th...
Evaluating effectiveness is of primary concern to social work practice; resources will always be lim...
In this article the authors consider how effective social work has been in terms of evidence-based p...