Article
Details
Citation
Ferguson I (2007) Increasing user choice or privatizing risk? The antinomies of personalization. British Journal of Social Work, 37 (3), pp. 387-403. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjsw/bcm016
Abstract
Within a very short space of time, the concept of personalization has come to occupy a central place within dominant social work and adult care discourses within the UK. Through an analysis of one influential model of personalization, this paper will explore the factors behind the concept's current popularity. I shall argue that this popularity is due primarily to its congruence with key themes of New Labour thought, including individualization, responsibilization and the transfer of risk from the state to the individual. I shall conclude that, given its acceptance of the marketization of social work and social care, its neglect of issues of poverty and inequality, its flawed conception of the people who use social work services, its potentially stigmatizing view of welfare dependency and its potential for promoting, rather than challenging, the deprofessionalization of social work, the philosophy of personalization is not one that social workers should accept uncritically.
Keywords
ACCEPT; Adult; analysis; care; choice; concept; discourse; factors; ISSUES; Labour; model; PEOPLE; Philosophies; Philosophy; PLACE; POVERTY; risk; service; services; social care; Social work; Social Workers; space; state; thought; time; transfer; UK; VIEW; welfare; WHO; work
Journal
British Journal of Social Work: Volume 37, Issue 3
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 31/12/2007 |
Publication date online | 17/03/2007 |
ISSN | 0045-3102 |
eISSN | 1468-263X |