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Working Metaphors: Cross‐Sector Collaboration between Domestic Violence and Substance Use Services

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posted on 2024-09-19, 00:51 authored by Van Callaly, Margaret Kertesz, Anne-Marie LaslettAnne-Marie Laslett, Jennifer Davidson, Cathy Humphreys
Collaboration between services addressing domestic violence and substance use presents scope for enhancement. This study presents the first stage of an Australian action research project that aimed to investigate cross-sector collaboration between domestic violence and substance use services. The study employed purposive sampling for data collection, with the primary author conducting semistructured interviews with 26 senior policy workers, practitioners, and managers about their previous experiences in promoting collaboration between these two sectors. Employing metaphor analysis as a heuristic tool, the authors identified the metaphorical concepts that interviewees used to frame their understanding of cross-sector collaboration. These metaphorical concepts reveal the diverse approaches to conceptualizing and implementing cross-sector collaboration. Collaboration was understood by participants as engaging with geopolitics, fixing infrastructure, running a business, and playing a game. Each metaphorical concept has implications for how professionals understand and perform cross-sector collaboration. The predominant language of cross-sectoral collaboration illuminates the discursive field in which policymakers and senior managers are situated. Certain metaphorical concepts hindered participants' capacity to engage and sustain collaborative practice, while others held potential to promote collaboration. Researchers identified potential opportunities to promote collaborative practices between substance use and domestic violence sectors. By gaining insight into how professionals conceptualized cross-sector collaboration, leverage points were identified that supported the development of a policy stakeholder group working to address systemic issues of cross-sectoral practice.

Funding

This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (LP200200847). Laslett is funded by a National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator Grant (Leadership, Level 2, #2016706) and a Victorian Near-Miss Award administered by Veski for the Victorian Health and Medical Research Workforce Project on behalf of the Victorian Government and the Association of Australian Medical Research Institutes with funding provided by the Victorian Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions.

History

Publication Date

2024-08-30

Journal

Health and Social Care in the Community

Volume

2024

Issue

1

Article Number

8000663

Pagination

11p.

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

0966-0410

Rights Statement

Copyright © 2024 Van Callaly et al. Tis is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License,which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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