In the welfare provision of today, power takes both the shape of
juridical sanctions and of attractive offers for self-development.
When state institutions punish criminals, remove children at risk,
or enforce sanctions upon welfare recipients the question of power
is immediately urgent. It is less readily evident that power is at
stake when institutions educate, counsel or empower citizens. This
book offers a framework for understanding and analyzing these
complex and implicit forms of power at play in the encounters
between citizens and welfare institutions.
Taking as its starting point the idea that power takes many
different shapes, and that different approaches to power may be
necessary in the diverse contexts where citizens encounter welfare
professionals, the book demonstrates how significant social
theorists, spanning from Goffman to Foucault, can be used for
inquiries into these encounters. Guiding the reader from their
epistemological foundations to lucid state of the art case
examples, the book unpacks each of its six theoretical
perspectives, and explains selected key concepts and explicates
their potential for analysis. The final chapter discusses the
usefulness of the theoretical approaches, their weaknesses and
indicates some possibilities of theoretical integration.
Including case studies of patients, nursing home residents,
unemployed people, homeless people, and young offenders, from the
USA, Denmark, France, Sweden, Canada, and Australia, "Power and
Welfare" is designed for students and researchers of social policy,
sociology, anthropology, political science, education, nursing and
social work."
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