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Journal of Social Work
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The Quasi-Market Revolution in the Head

Ideology, Discourse, Care Management

Malcolm Carey

Liverpool John Moores University, England, m.carey{at}livjm.ac.uk

Summary: The article explores the use of ideology by a group of care managers in the United Kingdom (n = 44) in their work environments. It draws upon ethnomethodological research which investigated the motivations of qualified employees for entering and remaining within state social work. As well as exploring the impact and uses of ideology, the article also questions the disparagement of universalism in the postmodern inspired critique of welfare. This is sustained by highlighting the broad and universal impact of neoliberalism in relation to the care management labour process.

Findings: Care managers utilize ideology throughout their practice, although this is predominantly inspired by external factors, notably legislation and policy. Despite this, there is evidence of some application of professional, and/or critical ideologies, which can offer respite from, and act as a form of resistance against neoliberal ideology within the care management labour process. Nevertheless, in practice, such resistance tends to be dispersed, sporadic and often individualistic.

Applications : It is proposed that the greater use of `emancipatory' ideology in the education and practice of care managers may help in resisting further deskilling and disenfranchisement. Also, the work of Gramsci and Foucault offers a potential framework to contextualize forms of anti-market resistance.

Key Words: care management • ideology • labour process • neoliberalism

Journal of Social Work, Vol. 8, No. 4, 341-362 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1468017308094989


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