Towards Indigenous Social Work practice: Addressing professional challenges in working with Homeless Greenlanders in Aalborg, Denmark

peer reviewed The article discusses the challenges within social work practices with the homeless Greenlandic population in Aalborg, Denmark, based on a case study at the Aalborg University. Interviews were conducted with social workers from service organizations across the Aalborg municipality. The...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Edwards, Jordanne, Valéria Montes D’Oco, Lisarb, Melaku Tefera, Gashaye
Other Authors: Krogh Kjær-RasmussenEdwards, Lone
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://orbilu.uni.lu/handle/10993/49591
https://orbilu.uni.lu/bitstream/10993/49591/1/Towards%20indigenous%20social%20work%20practice%20with%20Greenlanders%20in%20Denmark.pdf
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Summary:peer reviewed The article discusses the challenges within social work practices with the homeless Greenlandic population in Aalborg, Denmark, based on a case study at the Aalborg University. Interviews were conducted with social workers from service organizations across the Aalborg municipality. The findings are analyzed by drawing on a theoretical framework which addresses the role of social workers and social service institutions that support homeless Greenlanders to adjust to life in Denmark. Indigenous social work is presented as an alternative practice method to mitigate existing challenges within the field and to create culturally appropriate services. The findings revealed that cultural differences pose a fundamental challenge to the effective helping process of homeless Greenlanders in social work practices. Plausible recommendations for practice are identified.