Scientific article 30. JUN 2023
Finding Home: The Experience of Home on Journeys Away from Intimate Partner Violence,
The Social Sector
Children, Adolescents and Families
The Social Sector, Children, Adolescents and Families
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Violence in the intimate sphere can send women and children out of their homes and onto journeys over vast geographical distances and into various forms of temporary accommodation. When women and children are displaced like this, they have to settle and re-settle on their complex journeys away from intimate partner violence. This article shows that not all these places will be or become home and that the absence of home can entail different forms of distress, such as fear, alienation and despondency. The concept of home is (re)emerging in social work. By employing a threefold understanding of home as a physical place, a feeling and a practice, this article offers new insights into the role of home in the recovery process of women and children subjected to violence. Home is an essential place for adults and children. Therefore, this article argues that home is an important concept for social workers working with families subjected to violence, as finding home can be a central part of the recovery process. This article is based on data from two studies on families experiencing intimate partner violence, drawing on fieldwork at a women’s shelter and on semi-structured interviews with women and children.
About this publication
Financed by
Undersøgelsen af hverdagsliv og familieliv blandt kvinder og børn på et krisecenter, blev finansieret af Danmarks Frie Forskningsfond. Evalueringen af projektet ”Fra Bolig til hjem” blev bestilt og finansieret af Røde Kors. Røde Kors opnåede støtte fra Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond til projektet og til at gennemføre evalueringen.Published in
The British Journal of Social Work