Result: Understanding and acting on job demands and resources in Swedish social services: insights from accountable municipal politicians and board members of municipal companies

Title:
Understanding and acting on job demands and resources in Swedish social services: insights from accountable municipal politicians and board members of municipal companies
Source:
Nordic Social Work Research, Pp 1-15 (2025)
Publisher Information:
Taylor & Francis Group, 2025.
Publication Year:
2025
Collection:
LCC:Social pathology. Social and public welfare. Criminology
LCC:Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform
Document Type:
Academic journal article
File Description:
electronic resource
Language:
English
ISSN:
2156-8588
2156-857X
DOI:
10.1080/2156857X.2025.2603673
Accession Number:
edsdoj.4b59acc978e4ea39cf158297ea8b621
Database:
Directory of Open Access Journals

Further Information

In Sweden’s welfare system, social services face growing challenges related to employee well-being, staffing shortages, and the sustainability of the work environment. This qualitative study examines how municipal politicians and municipally owned company (MOC) board members – who are politically accountable for governance and bear employer responsibility via delegation – describe job demands and resources, and the actions they take to promote a balanced psychosocial and organizational work environment. Using the Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) model as the analytical framework, interviews were conducted with 17 municipal board members across 12 Swedish municipalities. The findings indicate that, although board members acknowledged a range of job demands (e.g. high workload, staff shortages, organizational change), their descriptions often lacked specificity and contextual nuance. Personal and lifestyle-related factors were frequently emphasized, with limited recognition of how political decisions shape structural working conditions. Similarly, job resources, such as social support, feedback, and HR practices, were noted in general terms, without clear alignment to specific demands. Strategies for improving the work environment were predominantly reactive, with resource allocation and monitoring shaped by routine processes rather than proactive governance. Overall, while board members expressed awareness of key challenges, their actions often fall short of addressing structural imbalances between demands and resources, underscoring the need for more informed, strategic, and equity-oriented governance practices in Swedish social services