This article offers an original interpretation of Otherness and Foreignness concepts, based on the peculiarities and challenges of intercultural helping relationships. In the social work discourse, the concepts of ‘Otherness’ and ‘Foreignness’ are core, often mentioned in a non-relational way adopting legal and administrative logics that involuntarily reproduce one-sided dynamics and borders between insider and outsider, Self and Other, and helper and helpee. The initial conceptual point of the paper is the recognition that each helping relationship starts with a reciprocal state of foreignness in which nobody is a foreigner by definition. Instead, at the beginning, each is foreigner to the other. Otherness, mutual foreignness, and sharing ...
Taking care of migrants constitutes a new challenge for the actual operative structures of the serv...
This presentation engages with the changes in, and current methodological approaches to social work ...
We discuss the implications of identities constructed by an Afghan client in a conversation with her...
Social work research into migration issues has developed slowly in recent years, however research on...
Social work in Europe is facing numerous challenges in terms of promoting the participation of migra...
Professional social work was established and expanded in a historical moment marked by intense natio...
Introduction Over the last few years, the concepts and categories of transnational migration studie...
The United States is historically a nation of immigrants, and since the 1970s has seen a substantial...
Nation states’ neoliberal policies do not regard asylum seekers and undocumented migrants as deservi...
A growing number of people & mdash;immigrants, refugees, asylum-seekers, displaced individuals, and ...
In societies characterized by globalization and increasing mobility, social workers are more often c...
This article explores how Latin American social workers living in Switzerland develop transnational ...
Internationalisation has been the subject of significant debate in social work education for at leas...
Historically, migration has been a way for many to improve their working and earning opportunities, ...
Within social work, it is often assumed that migration is a signifier for social deprivation; howeve...
Taking care of migrants constitutes a new challenge for the actual operative structures of the serv...
This presentation engages with the changes in, and current methodological approaches to social work ...
We discuss the implications of identities constructed by an Afghan client in a conversation with her...
Social work research into migration issues has developed slowly in recent years, however research on...
Social work in Europe is facing numerous challenges in terms of promoting the participation of migra...
Professional social work was established and expanded in a historical moment marked by intense natio...
Introduction Over the last few years, the concepts and categories of transnational migration studie...
The United States is historically a nation of immigrants, and since the 1970s has seen a substantial...
Nation states’ neoliberal policies do not regard asylum seekers and undocumented migrants as deservi...
A growing number of people & mdash;immigrants, refugees, asylum-seekers, displaced individuals, and ...
In societies characterized by globalization and increasing mobility, social workers are more often c...
This article explores how Latin American social workers living in Switzerland develop transnational ...
Internationalisation has been the subject of significant debate in social work education for at leas...
Historically, migration has been a way for many to improve their working and earning opportunities, ...
Within social work, it is often assumed that migration is a signifier for social deprivation; howeve...
Taking care of migrants constitutes a new challenge for the actual operative structures of the serv...
This presentation engages with the changes in, and current methodological approaches to social work ...
We discuss the implications of identities constructed by an Afghan client in a conversation with her...