Thursday, 20 November 2025

The Post-Soviet Model of Accountability in the Estonian Local Welfare Government | Chapter 6 | New Ideas Concerning Arts and Social Studies Vol. 5

 

Background: Accountability is ubiquitous in social systems, and its necessity is increased in formal organisations that supposedly aim to predict and control behaviour. Today’s public authorities need to show value diversity, understand and respect different cultures, and design and deliver culturally relevant and responsive programs and services. Accountability in social work is crucial for ensuring professional legitimacy and adherence to public organisational practices. This is particularly important in the Estonian context, where social welfare is undergoing rapid changes due to Europeanization and public administration reforms.

 

Aim: This chapter aims to shed light on accountability in administrative social work within the Estonian welfare model. Specifically, it seeks to examine how the responsibility of the nation-state is shared in ensuring social well-being and to explore how the provision of necessary social services to residents can be predicted.

 

Methods: A meso-level model was employed, integrating contemporary research and expanding perspectives from individual, group, and organisational levels into a coherent framework. A case study approach was used, analysing publicly available documentation and data from three Estonian local governments (Viru-Nigula, Lüganuse, and Mustvee) collected between 2020 and 2022. To study the process of accountability, a concept has been developed with the following features: legal basis, political discourse of well-being, theoretical discourse, standards, public information, applied methods, profession/profession, decision-making process, and evaluation.

 

Results: The study reveals challenges in predicting social service provision to clients. These challenges stem from the fragmented nature of the Estonian welfare system, the lack of clear criteria for allocating local social benefits, the limited professional autonomy of social workers in local governments, and the opacity and lack of evaluation mechanisms in accountability processes in Estonian social welfare.

 

Conclusions: The research highlights the need for clearer definitions of social work roles, stronger professional autonomy for social workers, and a more client-centred approach to social welfare in Estonia. Future research directions include exploring the perspectives of social workers, clients, and policymakers on accountability in social welfare and conducting comparative studies with other countries.

 

 

Author(s) Details

Vaike Raudava
Department of Social Science, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia.

 

Please see the book here :- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/nicass/v5/6613

No comments:

Post a Comment