Summary information

Study title

Everyday Bordering in the UK: The Impact on Social Care Practitioners and the Migrant Families With Whom They Work, 2020-2022

Creator

Walsh, J, The University of Sheffield
Khan, A, Cardiff University
Ferazzoli, M, The University of Sheffield

Study number / PID

856229 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-856229 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

Data are transcripts based on focus groups and qualitative interviews with social care practitioners, and interviews with members of migrant families living in the UK. Practitioner data relates to focus groups, and some interviews, conducted at the start of the study which then informed the content of one-to-one ‘mid-point’ interviews with other practitioners. Professional groups represented are linked to anonymised collaborating organisations, including: educators, family support workers, social workers and youth and community workers. Further data is based on interviews conducted with practitioners ‘external’ to the collaborating organisation, most of whom were qualified social workers. Data generated via work with migrant families include transcripts from interviews with members of migrant families. Some were interviewed separately, and others in pairs, or as a group of three. Prior to the interviews, participants completed creative diaries. However, these included names, photographs and highly personal accounts. As such, they cannot be anonymised and have not been used as data but, rather an elicitation tool in the interviews. For this reason, the content of the diaries is not shared here. All transcripts have been anonymised. Names have been replaced with pseudonyms and other identifying characteristics have been removed, including the names of identifying collaborating organisations. The study was conducted across two cities that are identified: Hull and Sheffield. For this reason, the cities and the names of some organisations and areas of the city that are referenced have not been changed. The ‘Everyday Bordering in the UK: the impact of everyday bordering on social care practitioners and the migrant families with whom they work’, was a 30-month project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, 2020-2022. The project sought to understand if and how the UK’s increasingly hostile environment towards immigration impacts on social care...
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/01/2020 - 30/11/2022

Country

United Kingdom

Time dimension

Not available

Analysis unit

Individual
Organization
Family

Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

Not available

Kind of data

Text

Data collection mode

The research design was underpinned by the values of coproduction and was developed in collaboration with the organisations, practitioners and families with who we worked. The project Advisory Board consisted of representatives from collaborating organisations, academics, and other local and national stakeholders, who also influenced the direction of the study and methods adopted. Practitioners and migrant family members were recruited via collaborating organisations and their wider networks. As the study took place during the first and second peaks of the COVID pandemic in the UK, online tools were used and, later, research was conducted in person. However, all the interviews, apart from two, were conducted online. Overall, we conducted four initial online focus groups with practitioners (12 participants), followed by 29 one-to-one interviews with a diverse range of professionals internal and external to collaborating organisations. We asked practitioners to talk about their experiences of working with migrant family members, including the nature of the work and factors that influences the support that they provided for families. We also worked with members of 12 migrant families. Over a four-week period, families completed ‘family diaries’ which were then used as an elicitation tool in one-to-one and group interviews with family members that volunteered to be interviewed. These were either family adults (parents), or children that were 18+. We spoke with them about their experiences of everyday life in the UK, including those related to their contact with a diverse range of social care providers. The migrant family members included people that were seeking asylum, refugees and EU migrants, 13 women and 6 men.

Funding information

Grant number

ES/S015833/1

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

2023

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.

Related publications

Not available