Class and gender in Russian welfare policies : Soviet legacies and contemporary challenges
Abstract
The general aim of this thesis is to explore the gendered and classed nature of social work and social welfare in Russia to show how social policy can be a part of and reinforce marginalisation. The overall research question is in what ways class and gender are constructed in Russian social work practice
and welfare rhetoric through Soviet legacies and contemporary challenges?
In addition, which actors contribute to the constitution of social work values and how this value system affects the agency of the clients? This study focuses on contradictory ideologies that are shaped in discursive formations of social policy, social work training and practice. It is a qualitative study, containing fi ve papers looking at this issue from three different perspectives: policy and
institutions, culture and discourse, actors and identity. The data collection was arranged as a purposive–iterative process. The empirical material consists of qualitative interviews with social work practitioners, administrators and
clients, participant observations in social services and analysis of documents of various kinds.
The results show that modernisation of social life under socialism was concerned with the internalisation of new forms of discipline, standards of everyday life, collectivist values and beliefs in equality which impacted on
public and private domains, including social services provision (Paper I), which was of a classed and gendered nature. The post-Soviet welfare policy is characterised by the legacies of conservative thinking and lack of discretion
in social work as a profession, excessive institutionalising of children and suppression of the voices of vulnerable people. Low income parents become the objects of governmental control, and existing forms of social policy act towards fastening them in vulnerable position. Additional pressure is on
those families who raise children with disabilities and on parents who have
disability themselves. Stigma affects a parent on a deep emotional level and has social implications for her and the child. Thus, the politics of exclusion at the institutional level fl ows to the level of personal experience and everyday practice (Paper II). Parenting is a cultural and classed experience by liberal
welfare policy, which can reinforce marginalisation through institutional
structures and discourses. The discursive and narrative practices are important cultural resources used by the parents to understand their personal lives and by service providers who create their own understandings of social problems (Paper V). The structural context of social work is constituted by inequality
in the social order, which is mirrored in the conditions of the labour market.
The problems of a client might be an outcome of beliefs in traditional gender roles and traditional family defi nitions, which supposes inequality and subordination of women. In addition, models of social work practice
often admit such a defi nition and, therefore, worsen the condition of women (Paper IV). The contemporary situation in social work in Russia is featured by under-professionalisation and thereby a low degree of autonomy, absence of critical refl ection of social work practice, and rigidity of governance (Paper
III). This is the background where initiatives to change the existing social order can hardly be seen. However, social workers are gradually acquiring new knowledge and skills to effect social change in a democratic egalitarian mode rather than following the paternalist scheme of thought and action.
Parts of work
Iarskaia-Smirnova, Elena and Pavel Romanov (2009) Visual case study
in the history of Russian child welfare, in: Die Zeitschrift der Schweizerischen
Gesellschaft für Soziale Arbeit, 6/7: 29-50 Iarskaia-Smirnova, Elena (1999) “What the future will bring I do not
know...” Mothering Children with Disabilities in Russia and the Politics of
Exclusion, in: Frontiers. Journal for Women Studies, 2: 58-86. Iarskaia-Smirnova, Elena and Pavel Romanov (2002) “A salary is not important here…” Professionalization of Social Work in Contemporary Russia, in: Social Policy and Administration, 36(2):123-141, doi: 10.1111/1467-9515.00275 Iarskaia-Smirnova, Elena and Pavel Romanov (2008) Gendering social work in Russia: towards anti-discriminatory practices, in: Equal Opportunities, 27(1): 64-76, doi: 10.1108/02610150810844947 Iarskaia-Smirnova, Elena and Pavel Romanov Doing class in social
welfare discourses: ‘unfortunate families’ in Russia, submitted to “Rethinking
class in Russia”, edited by Suvi Salmenniemi, in print at Ashgate
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Social Work ; Institutionen för socialt arbete
Disputation
28 oktober, kl. 13.15 i hörsalen Sappören, Institutionen för socialt arbete, Sprängkullsgatan 25, Göteborg
Date of defence
2011-10-28
elena.iarskaia@socpolicy.ru
Date
2011-10-10Author
Iarskaia-Smirnova, Elena
Keywords
class, gender, welfare policies, social policy, Russia, social work profession, ideology, institutions, culture, actors
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-86796-82-2
ISSN
1401-5781
Series/Report no.
2011: 4
Language
eng