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E-grāmata: Welfare Work with Immigrants and Refugees in a Social Democratic Welfare State

(University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
  • Formāts: 210 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Mar-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351264433
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
  • Cena: 48,83 €*
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  • Formāts: 210 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-Mar-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351264433

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Welfare Work with Immigrants and Refugees in a Social Democratic Welfare State provides an ambiguous yet disturbing portrait of the inner workings of the Danish welfare state and its implications in a context of globalisation and migration.

Through a sociological interview-study with welfare workers, this book describes how processes of othering are undercurrents of welfare work. The processes construct immigrants and refugees as a kind of people who are not only culturally different but also behind, deficient and weak, and thus assigned the potential to benefit from welfare work. These processes are designated to advance a racial welfare dynamic of remedial circularity which keeps the immigrant and refugee on the threshold of modern living and democracy. It is thus depicted how welfare work is intertwined not with a biological framework but with a cultural framework naturalising and ontologising cultural differences. The book examines how welfare work tends to appreciate immigrants and refugees as dislocated people with a cultural lack and how it abides by the dictums of civilising expansions and humanitarian imperialism within the modern state.

This book will be useful for every scholar who wants to reconsider and think differently about how the welfare state is going to proceed in a global society.

Foreword viii
PART I Introductions
1(46)
1 The stage and the centre of attention
3(12)
Welfare work's magic, progress and perfectibility: dependency on the dependent
4(3)
The modern state and modern welfare work's proliferating and fixating images
7(4)
The book's major themes compared to similar works
11(2)
Notes
13(1)
References
13(2)
2 Analytical focus and methodology
15(1)
Welfare work and welfare workers as sociological objects
15(4)
The sociological interview study and opening analytical moves
19(4)
Notes
23(1)
References
24(2)
3 Entering the Danish field of welfare work addressing immigrants and refugees
26(1)
Welfare workers' encounters with immigrants and refugees
26(5)
The Danish case and the features of the Nordic or social democratic welfare state
31(12)
Notes
43(1)
References
43(4)
PART II Symbolic resources mobilised in welfare work addressing immigrants and refugees
47(102)
4 Rights
51(1)
Social rights to welfare: mothers' groups, bicycles and these two cultures
51(19)
Human rights and individual rights to a dignified life: integrity, being yourself and identifying as you please
70(6)
Notes
76(1)
References
77(1)
5 Culture
78(1)
Cultural modernisation: schooling, risks and the separation of groups
78(14)
Scientific reasoning: evidence, investigations and legitimations
92(7)
References
99(1)
6 Policies
100(8)
Human development as being technically governable: from potted plants to coffee, cross-professional optimisation and the unimprovable chronic WO The human being as economics-oriented: a fraud, self-reliant and employed
108(8)
References
116(1)
7 Morals
117(1)
The local community as a moral source for the purpose of reforming
117(9)
References
126(1)
8 Welfare work's structure and the illusion of the Other
127(1)
Constructions and objectifications of immigrants and refugees
128(7)
Human difference and bow race, racism and racialisation works in modern welfare work
135(10)
The illusion and the illusion of the Other
145(1)
Notes
146(1)
References
146(3)
PART III Societal forms operating welfare work addressing immigrants and refugees
149(46)
9 Benevolence
153(1)
Navigating professionalism by benevolence
154(6)
Helping, giving and maintaining the status quo of society
160(3)
References
163(1)
10 Supremacy
164(1)
Marked supremacy
165(4)
Unmarked supremacy
169(5)
Silencing the actions of supremacy and maintaining the status quo of racialised society
174(1)
Note
175(1)
References
175(1)
11 Critique
176(1)
Critique as a modern capability
177(2)
Modern critique
179(3)
Postmodern critique
182(3)
Maximising society and refusing its racist foundations
185(1)
Notes
186(1)
References
186(1)
12 Racialised and racialising welfare work done undone
187(1)
Done undone
191(2)
References
193(2)
Index 195
Trine Ųland, PhD, is Associate Professor in Educational Research at the University of Copenhagen. Her primary fields of study are the history and sociology of progressive education and welfare state progressivism, and racialisation and classification processes in connection with the emergence and transformation of educational ideas and practices. She is head of the research group "The History and Sociology of Welfare Work at University of Copenhagen".