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Social work and “the social”: a biopolitical perspective
Author(s) -
Stephen A. Webb
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
zeszyty pracy socjalnej
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2449-6138
pISSN - 1507-4285
DOI - 10.4467/24496138zps.20.024.13079
Subject(s) - biopower , governmentality , sociology , perspective (graphical) , welfare state , context (archaeology) , social work , politics , authoritarianism , political science , law , democracy , paleontology , artificial intelligence , computer science , biology
ABSTRAKTAmid the uncertainty of the current political context and an unprecedented institutional crisis in European welfare, this article offers a theoretical analysis of the problems arising from the historical reshaping of social work as a biopolitical organ of the state. It undertakes this analysis from a biopolitical perspective and asks how this framework can help us in defining the specific features of social work intervention in family life? To properly answer, the article proposes a methodological understanding which explicates a series of relations between “biopolitics – the social – social work”. To this end, supported by analyses from Foucault and Donzelot, the article shows how social work as a form of state governmentality intervenes in the lives of families to normalise behaviour and conduct. From a critical vantage point, these findings compel us to re-examine the problem of consent and consensus when working with service users and families in the midst of an increasingly more controlling authoritarian social work.

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