Conference paper
Unpaid labour in Slovenian society: a case for mental health social work approach
Papers in Strengths based practice, pp.75-92
Strengths Based Conference, 2012 (Kathmandu, Nepal, 22-Nov-2012–24-Nov-2012)
Allied Publishers Pty. Ltd.
2012
Abstract
Paid employment was for a long time seen as way of preventing poverty. In the past three decades this notion has changed rapidly, in that precarious, atypical forms of employment and work, resulting in the trend of so called 'working poor' have been surfacing. This trend was first noticed in the United States in the seventies and now becoming a pervasive phenomenon throughout Europe. Thus full-time and decently paid employment is becoming a privilege, especially in Slovenia faced by the challenging market forces and simultaneous welfare reform. Paid labour is becoming valued commodity deserved and held only by the 'deserving'. An army of otherwise 'deserving', but nevertheless working poor, consisting also of people with university degrees, is additionally straining the traditionally 'undeserving' plainly poor and marginalised groups such as people with long-term mental health issues. Both the categories- the 'deserving' and the 'undeserving' are falling into a vicious circle: one lot are poorly paid and receives flexible forms of employment and the other lot is stigmatised as lazy and lacking in strong will and as such forced to work in 'workfare programmes' in exchange for social benefits. How does social work as a profession view this emerging trend and respond? Does the profession see any moral issues? The purpose of this paper is to bring awareness and a critical comment about the issues within the context of current neoliberal reforms welfare ethos that appears to promote the notion of 'deserving' and 'undeserving' service users and welfare recipients. The paper suggests a strengths appraisal to Slovenian society to improve gainful entry of the currently marginalised and vulnerable sections of the populations that are unable to claim beyond subsistence incomes which in turn clearly exacerbates their mental health issues and resign s them with long term poverty and long term welfare interventions
Details
- Title
- Unpaid labour in Slovenian society: a case for mental health social work approach
- Authors
- Venkat Pulla (Author) - Charles Sturt UniversityRomana Zidar (Author) - University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
- Contributors
- Venkat Pulla (Editor)
- Publication details
- Papers in Strengths based practice, pp.75-92
- Conference details
- Strengths Based Conference, 2012 (Kathmandu, Nepal, 22-Nov-2012–24-Nov-2012)
- Publisher
- Allied Publishers Pty. Ltd.
- Date published
- 2012
- ISBN
- 9788184248104
- Copyright note
- Copyright © 2012 The Convener, Papers in Strengths Based Practice. Reproduced here with permission.
- Organisation Unit
- University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland
- Language
- English
- Record Identifier
- 99448645502621
- Output Type
- Conference paper
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