2011
DOI: 10.1177/0020872811408574
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Working with volunteers in victim support: Mirror or camouflage?

Abstract: We address the role of volunteers in victim support in regard to the growing issue of specialization. We argue for a generic basis of victim services and that working with volunteers and professionals holds chances and pitfalls. Volunteers can function as camouflage or as a mirror for professional social work.

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Paid staff members include contact service workers who answer calls to the helpline. Like other victim support services around the world, the distinction between paid technical work (managing incoming calls) and voluntary emotional work (providing support) obscures the way these forms of work are regularly combined (Roose, Verschelden, Vettenburg, & Vanthuyne, 2012). As my analyses show, the work accomplished during a call is more complex than what is usually glossed as 'technical.'…”
Section: Background To the Settingmentioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Paid staff members include contact service workers who answer calls to the helpline. Like other victim support services around the world, the distinction between paid technical work (managing incoming calls) and voluntary emotional work (providing support) obscures the way these forms of work are regularly combined (Roose, Verschelden, Vettenburg, & Vanthuyne, 2012). As my analyses show, the work accomplished during a call is more complex than what is usually glossed as 'technical.'…”
Section: Background To the Settingmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The organisation treats supporting victims as a proper role for trained support workers. Yet these support workers are volunteers, which suggests emotional support and practical advice are forms of help normatively available to competent members of a community (Roose et al, 2012). Callers seeking help for others oriented to the way that supporting victims can be a proper obligation for members of either professional or relationship categories.…”
Section: 32mentioning
confidence: 99%