Social Policy. Fiona Williams

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Social Policy - Fiona Williams

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intersectional social justice. This does not rely only on intersectionality, or only on the theories mostly closely associated with it, but seeks to align and synthesize other perspectives and concepts in social policy analysis which share and enhance some of its key concepts and concerns. Those writing on intersectionality have stressed the ‘provisional’ nature of its theorizing (Carastathis 2016: chap. 3). It is not the last word on multiple processes of subordination but looks to both political and intellectual possibilities for change. In this way I draw on work which also carries the characteristics I have described above, which can be found, for example, in some political economy perspectives, critical geography, conjunctural analysis, critical race theory, theories of postcoloniality and decoloniality, critical disability and queer theories, eco-social policy analysis and psychosocial analysis. These, and others, inform my synthesis, while at its core is an insistence on applying to social policy analysis a critical and relational understanding of contingency, contestation, connectedness, contradiction, and a firm resistance to overdeterminism, essentialism and reductionism.

      In these terms, the chapter considered the relevance of intersectionality as an approach that, on the one hand, combines theory, method and political practice and, on the other, is highly attuned to inequalities and power around race, gender, disability, sexuality and class. I argued that intersectionality’s focus on lived experience, on understanding the complex and multiple nature of contestations, social inequalities and social justice, is crucial. It enables hidden injustices to be unfolded and provides an understanding of the relationship between commonalities and specificities and their link to political practices – all extremely relevant to critical social policy approaches. At the same time, as a relatively loose approach, it is necessary to be aware of problems in its application as well as its potential for social policy analysis. In order to mitigate these I turned to key analytical insights from critical thinking in social policy which in some ways are shared with an intersectional approach. These include the importance of contestation, in particular, but also of context, contingency, contradiction and criticality. Together the two approaches can clarify the connections between social, cultural, political and economic injustices to examine the nature of neoliberal welfare states within a political economy of global financialized capitalism which is extractivist, patriarchal and racializing. This requires a frame of analysis that avoids reductionism to single causes or monolithic conspiracy and allows for its contradictory nature. Chapter 3 takes this up.

      1 1. This is a summary of the analysis in Williams (1989) and was shaped by the different feminist and anti-racist writings of the time referenced in that book.

      2 2. This is not the case in Capital and Ideology (Piketty 2020), where the history of slavery is seen as central to capitalism’s development.

      3 3. For a more developed discussion see Nash (2019).

      4 4. This podcast and video explain this more fully: www.kingsfund.org.uk/audio-video/podcast/covid-19-racism-health-inequality; www.thebritishacademy.ac.uk/events/british-academy-10-minute-talks-covid-19-and-inequalities/.

       Introduction

      Since the 1990s, most governments in developed countries have, to a greater or lesser extent, implemented neoliberal market principles in their welfare states. In general terms this has involved privatization, marketization, consumerism, labour market activation and individual responsibility, especially of self-support through paid work. It has generated the creation of markets and quasi-markets within public services, contracting out services to the private and voluntary (third) sector, and establishing partnerships with these sectors to deliver services. Welfare infrastructure, institutions and governance were reorganized according to new public management principles based on corporate business practice and the normalization of economy and competitiveness as serving efficiency and innovation. In its turn, this development has sought to construct service-users as consumers shopping wisely in the marketplace of health, personalized social care, welfare and education, while aligning services and benefits to the needs and requirements of the labour market and, more broadly, to competitiveness in a globalized economy.

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