ABSTRACT
Concern about the role social workers play in adult social care is long standing. Social workers, whose ethics commit them to supporting the empowerment of service users and to social justice, are required to work within a system that fails to secure either and is widely identified as in long-term crisis, despite a number of unsuccessful efforts to transform it. This article describes a detailed examination of the way one council operates. It reveals the gap between how the council says it does this and how this is experienced. It is suggested that the council, however, is not an exception. It follows the national template. The role social workers are required to play in this scenario is critical. They are key to delivery of the template. With little sign of resistance from the social work system itself, hopes for change rely on the emergence of grassroots and political initiatives that seeks a better future for social care.
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Colin Slasberg
Colin Slasberg is a qualified social worker, worked in local authorities in children’s services for the first part of his career and in adults’ services for the second part. Subsequently, he has undertaken analysis and written on policy and its implications, in relation especially to adults and personalisation.
Peter Beresford
Peter Beresford OBE, is Professor of Citizen Participation at University of East Anglia and Emeritus Professor of Social Policy at Brunel University. He is also Co-Chair of Shaping Our Lives, a national service user organisation. He has written on social policy in the UK and internationally, recently most extensively in All Our Welfare: Towards Participatory Social Policy (2016).