Working the Edge: The Emotional Experiences of Commissioning and Funding Arrangements for Service Leaders in the Sexual Violence Voluntary Sector

Author:

Gunby Clare12ORCID,Isham Louise3,Smailes Harriet24,Bradbury-Jones Caroline5ORCID,Damery Sarah2,Harlock Jenny6,Maxted Fay7,Smith Deb2,Taylor Julie58

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing and Public Health, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK

2. Institute of Applied Health Research, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

3. Department of Social Work and Social Care, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

4. School of Criminology, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK

5. School of Nursing, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

6. Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Warwick, UK

7. The Survivors Trust, Rugby, UK

8. Birmingham Women's and Children's Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, UK

Abstract

The specialist voluntary sector plays a crucial role in supporting survivors of sexual violence. However, in England, short-term funding underpins the sector's financial stability. This article examines sector leaders’ ways of coping, resisting and being affected by funding practices. Using the concept of edgework, we show how funding and commissioning dynamics push individuals to the edge of service sustainability, job satisfaction, and emotional well-being. We examine how these edges are “worked,” for example, by circumventing and remolding the edge. We offer an original way to theorize participants, make visible the emotional toll of service precarity and offer suggestions for support.

Funder

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference39 articles.

1. Arutyunova A. (2018, July 5). Why we need a feminist funding ecosystem. The Association for Women’s Rights in Development. https://www.awid.org/news-and-analysis/why-we-need-feminist-funding-ecosystem.

2. Second‐hand Emotion? Exploring the Contagion and Impact of Trauma and Distress in the Asylum Law Context

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