Abstract
How do political and educational reforms in welfare professional training affect welfare work and welfare workers? Does reform affect what kinds of students are recruited to professional training, and who later in fact enters welfare professional work?
This paper examines the Danish field of welfare work, and how field-wide reforms originating in the political and educational fields affect the structure of this field. The reforms are ones that can be grouped under the heading New Public Management, and include the establishing of Danish University Colleges for professional training, detailed changes in exam forms and tasks, and changing regulations of welfare professional work and responsibility.
I apply the term field of welfare work to institutions and agents of the Danish welfare state, all of whom are organized by a number of welfare professions. The field-term evokes the idea of social fields as put forward by Pierre Bourdieu (Bourdieu & Clough, 1998): a subsection of social space, organized by a specific logic, and specific practices. This implies understanding the agents and institutions of welfare work as having coherent categories of evaluation and perception, and common assumptions about the purpose of their work. Yet the notion of a field also implies that these categories and assumptions are the object of ongoing struggles about dominance within the field(Broady, 1991; Brodersen, 2009). Thus, in this paper I apply the notion of a field of welfare work to study a number of professions, their struggles, and their degree of closure under one heading, and thus the paper departs from a more traditional understanding of professions(Carlhed, 2011; Saks, 2012).
The Bourdieuan theoretical framework assumes that other fields affect the field of welfare work. Struggles within the political, bureaucratic end educational fields push dominating agendas into the field of welfare work through political agendas, administrative reforms, reforms of educational goals, structures and evaluations. These fields occupy a position of relative dominance towards the field of welfare work, meaning that reforms and political struggles “trickle down” into the struggles of the agents and institutions of the field of welfare work.
The paper examines the field of welfare work through these three research questions
- What forms of capital and relations of dominance structure the Danish field of welfare work?
- What changes has this structure undergone in recent years?
- How do these changes in capital structure relate to political and bureaucratic reform?
Previous studies(Frederiksen, 2010; Frederiksen, 2014) have shown welfare work to possess limited social status, and its agents as recruited from middle to lower class backgrounds, predominantly female, with an increasing number of immigrants or immigrant descent(Bøje, 2010; Harrits, Johansen, Kristensen, Olesen, & Larsen, 2014; Harrits & Olesen, 2012). These social characteristics relate to the dominated status of the field, and provide the impetus for examining a further question:
- To what extent do administrative and educational reforms mitigate or perpetuate the relatively dominated position of welfare workers?
I reconstruct the structure of the field of welfare work and the changes in that structure through a series of geometric data analyses(Le Roux & Rouanet, 2004). I makes separate analyses at different points in time between 1980 and 2013, the operational assumption being that reforms originating in socially dominant fields affect the capital structure of the dominated field of welfare work.(Lebaron, 2009)
The population analyzed are all members recruited to these professions in the years 1980- 2013: teachers, social workers, physio-therapists, occupational therapists, social educators, nurses, librarians, police officers and others (n=131.628, total of all analyses). I construct 4 separate spaces of welfare worker capital structure from register data on the capital portfolios of these individuals, encompassing own and inherited cultural and economic capital, and data on institution of employment, degree of employment, demography, and social position. These data are obtained from Statistics Denmark, and are population-wide comprehensive data as reported by a number of public institutions.
It is the changes in capital structure that provide the answers for the research questions about changing structures and dominance relations. These also allow me to examine the differences between the university colleges providing professional training, and the hierarchies between professions. The overall changes are compared to the findings of other studies of political and educational reforms in the period studied, which allows the paper to address the final research questions.
The papers shows that interventions which increase political and bureaucratic control over welfare work, over time lowers the social origin of the agents recruited to training for welfare work. This effect differs by profession, revealing a changing hierarchy of welfare professionals. These changes indicate that welfare policies and administrative reforms are in fact changing the welfare state in other ways than those manifested in the reform intents: by shifting recruitment, and changing professional hierarchies, dominant struggles of other fields affect the structure of the welfare state in numerous ways. Thus the paper informs ongoing discussions about education in the Scandinavian welfare state, and the shaping of European educational systems.
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Original language | Danish |
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Publication date | Sept 2015 |
Publication status | Published - Sept 2015 |
Event | ECER 2015 - Corvinuis University, Budapest, Hungary Duration: 7 Sept 2015 → 11 Sept 2015 |
Conference
Conference | ECER 2015 |
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Location | Corvinuis University |
Country/Territory | Hungary |
City | Budapest |
Period | 07/09/2015 → 11/09/2015 |