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040 _cNY
100 1 _aHoggett, Paul.
245 1 0 _aAgency, rationality and social policy
_h[electronic resource] /
_cPaul Hoggett.
300 _app. 37-56.
520 _aThe recent concern to develop a radical but critical account of agency in social policy is to be welcomed. However this article questions whether the work of A. Giddens can provide an adequate foundation for such a project. Giddens's account of the welfare subject contains several weaknesses. It is voluntaristic and yet paradoxically it cannot offer an adequate understanding of radical change. It is also rationalistic and assumes the existences of a unitary and knowledgeable subject. As a consequence there is a danger that social policy develops a lop-sided model of agency which is insufficiently sensitive to the passionate, tragic and contradictory dimensions of human experience. A robust account of the active welfare subject must be prepared to confront the real experiences of powerlessness and psychic injury which result from injustice and oppression and acknowledge human capacities for destructiveness towards self and others. Only by exploring these different subject positions – victim, ‘own worst enemy’ and creative, reflexive agent – can we develop an understanding of the welfare subject which is optimistic without being naive.
538 _aMode of access: Internet.
773 0 _tJournal of Social Policy
_g2001, Vol. 30, Issue 1
_x1469-7823
856 _uhttps://ezproxy01.ny.edu.hk:2078/10.1017/S0047279400006152
_zClick here to access full-text article
942 _2lcc
_cE-ARTICLE
999 _c40968
_d40968