2020
DOI: 10.1111/1468-4446.12740
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Bureaucratic encounters “after neoliberalism”: Examining the supportive turn in social housing governance

Abstract: It is well established that encounters between welfare bureaucracies and their clients have been reconfigured under neoliberalism to address the problem of “welfare dependency.” Contemporary bureaucratic encounters therefore entail measures to activate clients’ entrepreneurial/self‐governing capacities, and conditionality/sanctioning practices to deal with clients who behave “irresponsibly.” Despite the dominance of the neoliberal model, recent research has identified a counter‐trend in the practices of housin… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
4
0
2

Year Published

2022
2022
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
5
2

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
references
References 32 publications
(99 reference statements)
0
4
0
2
Order By: Relevance
“…They do so while personally living through the same economic and social pressures that have brought their tenants to seek support from the inadequate safety net of social housing. While many frontline social housing and shelter workers in Canada have reported burnout, moral injury and lack of support (Lane & Schiff, 2016; Olivet et al., 2010; Poskitt, 2019), in the UK, professional fulfillment and job satisfaction is most often found in housing workers who practice resistance to the structural violence that social housing is built upon and enacted through (Clarke et al., 2020). In doing so, they subject themselves to the risk of competitive capitalism—losing their career and income, and any economic security they may currently enjoy, to their values.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They do so while personally living through the same economic and social pressures that have brought their tenants to seek support from the inadequate safety net of social housing. While many frontline social housing and shelter workers in Canada have reported burnout, moral injury and lack of support (Lane & Schiff, 2016; Olivet et al., 2010; Poskitt, 2019), in the UK, professional fulfillment and job satisfaction is most often found in housing workers who practice resistance to the structural violence that social housing is built upon and enacted through (Clarke et al., 2020). In doing so, they subject themselves to the risk of competitive capitalism—losing their career and income, and any economic security they may currently enjoy, to their values.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recent scholarship disputes this characterisation, pointing to a messier and more uneven process of welfare reform. Scholars working from a poverty management framework have identified how voluntary sector organisations often advance alternative normative and practical ends, even when operating within state regulatory and funding frameworks (Baker and McGuirk, 2019; Clarke et al, 2020; DeVerteuil, 2015; Power and Bergan, 2019; Trudeau, 2012; Williams et al, 2016). Notably, DeVerteuil et al (2019) specify the voluntary sector as a complex entanglement of relationships.…”
Section: Deprivation Survival Tactics and Care Provision In Post-welf...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rather than a simple erosion of the welfare state they give rise to what DeVerteuil (2015: 6) terms ‘incomplete, uneven and emerging’ post-welfare cities. These are places where older and established forms of welfare persist alongside emerging forms of provision and care, including those that variously enact, respond to and resist neoliberal logics (Clarke et al, 2020; Evans and DeVerteuil, 2018a; Power and Bergan, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sie heben hervor, wie sich insbesondere in der sozialpolitischen Praxis genuin nicht-neoliberale Praktiken herausgebildet haben, die die Unzulänglichkeiten neoliberaler Politik einzudämmen und zu korrigieren suchen, ohne dass sich dies notwendigerweise in Modifikationen der politischen Ziele und Programme auf übergeordneter Ebene niederschlägt. Diese partiellen Korrekturen auf der Ebene der ‚street-level-operations' seien jedoch in ihrer Genese und ihren Effekten missverstanden, wenn man sie als bloße Bemäntelung oder Verwässerung des neoliberalen Projekts deute(Clarke et al 2020). Noch weitergehend plädieren andere Autor*innen für eine "Dezentrierung" der Governance, welche die "spannungsreiche Koexistenz"(Bevir und McKee 2016, S. 209) verschiedener Technologien des Regierens anerkennt, um dadurch auch dem Stellenwert und den Eigenlogiken von nicht-neoliberaler Politik und Praxis Rechnung zu tragen.…”
unclassified