Privatizing Responsibility: Public Sector Reform Under Neoliberal Government (Essay) Privatizing Responsibility: Public Sector Reform Under Neoliberal Government (Essay)

Privatizing Responsibility: Public Sector Reform Under Neoliberal Government (Essay‪)‬

Canadian Review of Sociology 2009, August, 46, 3

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

CURRENT RESEARCH AND WRITING FROM AUSTRALIA, Canada, United States, United Kingdom and other parts of Europe, and elsewhere, suggest that we are witnessing a change in how we think about and practice our responsibilities. (1) Many groups of people in diverse parts of the world are being mobilized to take on greater responsibilities. This situation is increasingly demanding action in the present, and compelling a degree of obligation and an active orientation toward the future. Through valuable time and labor, volunteers are being trained to take on greater responsibility for the disadvantaged, the vulnerable, and the marginalized. The unemployed and underemployed are being encouraged to act responsibly by re-educating themselves in order to acquire salaried employment. New solutions to poverty are highlighting the responsibility of individuals, private institutions, and international organizations to secure social and economic rights to citizens. These and other examples can help us to visualize a host of changes that foster new relations of responsibility and responsible citizenship. They also make it possible for us to picture what problems are to be solved, what objectives are to be sought, who and what is to be targeted for change, and how our actions are to be shaped differently. In the welfare states of Canada, United States, Northern and Western Europe, and elsewhere, welfare provision has shrunk in recent decades and led to the privatization and outsourcing of various public services. As a consequence of such transformations in liberal social government, a shift of emphasis from social responsibilities to private responsibilities has emerged. This shift reflects a neoliberal governmental style of thinking about and acting on problems that I term privatizing responsibility. As I argue, privatizing responsibility is neither a homogeneous or tightly knit structure or arrangement nor a model of cause and effect. Instead, it comprises diverse elements, shapes forms of conduct, and takes part in various forms of governing. A key argument developed in this paper is that it coexists alongside of governmental strategies, operates as a mobile assemblage that brings into play actors, groups, practices, events, and domains of conduct, and manifests in different parts of the world often to the detriment of people's lives and livelihoods. However, privatizing responsibility has different outcomes and does not apply universally to all groups or populations. The kinds of conduct it aims to create, and the kinds of relations between people, resources, institutions, or organizations it intends to achieve, are diverse.

GENRE
Nonfiction
RELEASED
2009
August 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
50
Pages
PUBLISHER
Canadian Sociological Association
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
260.7
KB
Adventures in Aidland Adventures in Aidland
2011
Social Work and Social Policy Social Work and Social Policy
2012
Space in Governance: The Dialectic Between Proximity and Distance in the Field of International Development/Espacer la Gouvernance: La Dialectique de la Proximite Et de la Distance Dans Le Champ Du Developpement International (Part III: the Inevitable Ideological Issue/Partie III: L'incontournable Enjeu Ideologique) Space in Governance: The Dialectic Between Proximity and Distance in the Field of International Development/Espacer la Gouvernance: La Dialectique de la Proximite Et de la Distance Dans Le Champ Du Developpement International (Part III: the Inevitable Ideological Issue/Partie III: L'incontournable Enjeu Ideologique)
2008
Diversity Management: Diversity Management:
2019
Neoliberalization Neoliberalization
2011
Communication, Culture and Social Change Communication, Culture and Social Change
2020
Ari Adut, On Scandal: Moral Disturbances in Society, Politics and Art (Book Review) Ari Adut, On Scandal: Moral Disturbances in Society, Politics and Art (Book Review)
2011
In Conversation with the American Sociological Association President: Randall Collins on Emotions, Violence, And Interactionist Sociology (Interview) In Conversation with the American Sociological Association President: Randall Collins on Emotions, Violence, And Interactionist Sociology (Interview)
2010
"We Are Not Aliens, We're People, And We Have Rights." Canadian Human Rights Discourse and High School Climate for LGBTQ Students (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, And Queer) (Essay) "We Are Not Aliens, We're People, And We Have Rights." Canadian Human Rights Discourse and High School Climate for LGBTQ Students (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, And Queer) (Essay)
2011
The Graying of "Sexual Health": A Critical Research Agenda. The Graying of "Sexual Health": A Critical Research Agenda.
2011
A Sociology of Human Rights: Rights Through a Social Movements Lens (Report) A Sociology of Human Rights: Rights Through a Social Movements Lens (Report)
2011
Changes in the Chinese Overseas Population, 1955 to 2007. Changes in the Chinese Overseas Population, 1955 to 2007.
2011