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This collection provides a broad coverage of recent changes in
medical and vocational rehabilitation in Northern Europe. It
presents analyses that cut across health sciences, medical
sociology, disability studies and comparative welfare state
research. Through this interdisciplinary perspective, the book
explores the changing roles of patients, caregivers, professionals
and institutions, and the wider implications of these changes for
social inequalities in health. What obstacles do different groups
of patients encounter when negotiating the complex chains of
medical and vocational services? Who decides regarding references
to specialized treatments, and the provision of comprehensive and
coordinated services, and different types of benefits and material
support? What is the importance of the resources that patients and
caregivers bring to bear in the rehabilitation process?
There is increasing academic interest in how Pierre Bourdieu's
sociology can be applied to management and organization studies
(MOS). In a context of increasing complexity faced by organizations
and those who work in them due to globalization, neoliberalism,
austerity, financial crisis, ecological issues, populism and
developing technologies, there is untapped potential to use
Bourdieu's theoretical inventions to arrive at greater
understandings of how change, transition and crisis shape work,
organizational life as well as relations between different
organizational and sectorial fields. This book aims to take a
specific focus on the relational nature of Bourdieu's work and its
relevance for contemporary organizations. It provides
empirically-grounded examples that showcase the explanatory
strength of Bourdieus intellectual concepts, such as field,
habitus, capital, hexis, hysteresis, symbolic power, symbolic
violence, doxa, illusio as applied to the current challenges within
MOS. Such challenges include issues resulting from globalization,
neoliberalism, financial crisis, ecological crisis, populism and
developing technologies, to name but a few; and added to those, a
global pandemic. The twelve chapters presented in this book study a
great variety and range of organizational phenomena that are
organized into three thematic sections: 'Neoliberalism, fields and
hysteresis', 'Global and national movements as sites for
competition and symbolic domination' and the 'The emergence and
transformation of professional fields'. The chapters show a concern
with the challenges and opportunities such developments offer to
MOS scholars and to managers and employees in public and private
sector organizations. It will be of interest to researchers,
academics and students in the fields of organizational studies,
critical management studies, human resource management and
sociology.
For Plato, philosophy depends on, or is perhaps even identical
with, dialectic. Few will dispute this claim, but there is little
agreement as to what Platonic dialectic is. According to a now
prevailing view it is a method for inquiry the conception of which
changed so radically for Plato that it "had a strong tendency ...
to mean 'the ideal method', whatever that may be" (Richard
Robinson). Most studies of Platonic dialectic accordingly focus on
only one aspect of this method that allegedly characterizes one
specific period in Plato's development. This volume offers fresh
perspectives on Platonic dialectic. Its 13 chapters present a
comprehensive picture of this crucial aspect of Plato's philosophy
and seek to clarify what Plato takes to be proper dialectical
procedures. They examine the ways in which these procedures are
related to each other and other aspects of his philosophy, such as
ethics, psychology, and metaphysics. Collectively, the chapters
challenge the now prevailing understanding of Plato's ideal of
method. New Perspectives on Platonic Dialectic will appeal to
scholars and advanced students interested in Plato, ancient
philosophy, philosophical method, and the history of logic.
This collection provides a broad coverage of recent changes in
medical and vocational rehabilitation in Northern Europe. It
presents analyses that cut across health sciences, medical
sociology, disability studies and comparative welfare state
research. Through this interdisciplinary perspective, the book
explores the changing roles of patients, caregivers, professionals
and institutions, and the wider implications of these changes for
social inequalities in health. What obstacles do different groups
of patients encounter when negotiating the complex chains of
medical and vocational services? Who decides regarding references
to specialized treatments, and the provision of comprehensive and
coordinated services, and different types of benefits and material
support? What is the importance of the resources that patients and
caregivers bring to bear in the rehabilitation process?
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