Online @: https://rsw.erickson.international/en/visualizza/pdf/596
Here we discuss the Heideggerian phenomenology which focuses on understanding human experience by looking at how we exist in the world, rather than analyzing things from a distance. Instead of treating people as detached observers, Heidegger emphasizes being-in-the-world—the idea that our thoughts, actions, and identities are shaped by our everyday interactions, relationships, and concerns. It’s a way of exploring meaning that starts from lived experience rather than abstract theory.
In line with Martin Heidegger we gain insights into the live worlds of child protection social workers to understand their everyday lived experience of job risks and burnout through a phenomenological perspective