Volume 29, Issue 2 p. 192-197
Invited Article

Reconstruction of post-war social work: Experience from former Yugoslavia as an inspiration

Sven Hessle

Corresponding Author

Sven Hessle

Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

Sven Hessle, Department of Social Work, Stockholm University, Sveaplan 160, Stockholm SE-106 91, Sweden

E-mail: sven.hessle@socarb.su.se

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First published: 12 February 2020
Citations: 2
This English version of this invited article is based on a chapter in a recently published textbook in the Swedish language (Hessle ( 2018). Att invadera med välvilja – dialog och kolonisering i socialt välfärdsarbete [Invasion with compassion – Dialogue and colonization in social welfare]. Lund: Studentlitteratur).

Abstract

Immediately after the civil war among the nations of former Yugoslavia that took place 1992–1995, Swedish members of the social work faculty were recruited by UNICEF to support the organising of foster homes for war-orphaned children. Around 20 projects, some initiated by UNICEF and others by SIDA (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency) were also organised with Sarajevo University as the main location of the administration. At the request of the Parliament of Republika Srpska, a new school of social work was established at the University of Banja Luka. This was a successful project thanks to network collaboration among the faculties of social work in the former Yugoslavian nations and with academic contributions from universities from Sweden and Berlin. In this article, the two social welfare projects based in Sarajevo and Banja Luka are presented. Together with an accompanying group of experts, I found that an explorative mindset and an abductive approach were helpful tools in dialogues with our partners in the developing world.

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