Biographical methods and professional practice: An international perspective
Biographical methods and professional practice: An international perspective
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Abstract
The turn to biographical methods in social science is yielding a rich harvest of research outcomes and invigorating the relationship between policy and practice. This book uses a range of interpretive approaches to reveal the dynamics of service users' and professionals' individual experiences. It shows how biographical methods can improve theoretical understanding of professional practice, as well as enrich the learning and development of professionals, and promote more meaningful and creative practitioner-service user relationships. The book reviews applications of biographical methods in both policy and practice in a range of professional contexts, from health and social care to education and employment. In addition, it explores the impact on professional practice of social change in three main arenas: transformation from Eastern to Western types of society in Europe, major shifts in social and welfare principles, experiences of immigration and of new cultural diversity. The book critically evaluates subjective and reflexive processes in interactions between researchers, practitioners and users of services, and considers the institutional arrangements and cultural contexts which support effective and sensitive interventions and encourage change in the lives of individuals.
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Front Matter
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One
Introduction
Ursula Apitzsch and others
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Part One: Putting the subject into policy and practice
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Two
Biographical methods and social policy in European perspective
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Three
Balancing precarious work, entrepreneurship and a new gendered professionalism in migrant self-employment
Ursula Apitzsch
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Four
Considerations on the biographical embeddedness of ethnic entrepreneurship
Maria Kontos
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Five
Ethnic entrepreneurship as innovation1
Feiwel Kupferberg
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Two
Biographical methods and social policy in European perspective
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Part Two: Subjectivity in context
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Six
The social subject in biographical interpretive methods: emotional, mute, creative, divided
Andrew Cooper
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Seven
A socially and historically contextualised psychoanalytic perspective: Holocaust survival and suffering1
Daniel Bar-On
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Eight
Professional choices between private and state positions in Russia’s transformation
Victoria Semenova
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Nine
Maintaining a sense of individual autonomy under conditions of constraint: a study of east german managers
Ulrike Nagel
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Six
The social subject in biographical interpretive methods: emotional, mute, creative, divided
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Part Three: Self-awareness in research and practice
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Ten
Biographical reflections on the problem of changing violent men
David Gadd
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Eleven
The biographical turn in health studies
Wendy Rickard
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Twelve
Ethical aspects of biographical interviewing and analysis
Kaja Kaźmierska
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Thirteen
Ghost writers: using biographical methods across languages
Bogusia Temple
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Ten
Biographical reflections on the problem of changing violent men
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Part Four: Recognising trajectories of disempowerment
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Fourteen
‘Bucking and kicking’: race, gender and embodied resistance in healthcare
Yasmin Gunaratnam
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Fifteen
Biography as empowering practice: lessons from research
Joanna Bornat andJan Walmsley
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Sixteen
‘It’s in the way that you use it’: biography as a tool in professional social work
Riitta Kyllönen
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Seventeen
Interpreting the needs of homeless men: interviewing in context
Karin Schlücker
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Fourteen
‘Bucking and kicking’: race, gender and embodied resistance in healthcare
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Part Five: Biographical resources in education and training
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Eighteen
In quest of teachers’ professional identity: the life story as a methodological tool
Marie-Françoise Chanfrault-Duchet
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Nineteen
Narratives, community organisations and pedagogy
Rosemary Du Plessis and others
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Twenty
Doctors on an edge: a cultural psychology of learning and health
Linden West
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Twenty One
Intercultural perspectives and professional practice in the university: what’s new in Germany
Lena Inowlocki and others
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Eighteen
In quest of teachers’ professional identity: the life story as a methodological tool
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End Matter
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