What is it about?
Social policies are described as active on the basis of formal legal provisions, or on the grounds of expenditure data. Using the notion, set forth by Lipsky, M. [(1980). Street-level bureaucracy: Dilemnas of the individual in public services (2010 ed.). New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation] as well as by several subsequent authors, that social workers who implement policies actually play a role in (re)defining them, the present article intends to explore the way in which active social policies are implemented in a Swiss canton. On the basis of an original study, we show that, on the one hand, social workers tend to view activation as a distant perspective – which means they often do no put it into practice right away. And activation, when social workers do deem it to be necessary, takes on different meanings depending on whether they are dealing with young people or with mothers. As a result, the actual meaning of the word activation varies – a fact that scholars who focused solely on formal/legal activation policies were not in a position to observe.
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Why is it important?
Our findings show that active social policies, when implemented, are not so "active" because social workers have to deal with problems that prevent them from activating recipients.
Perspectives
With Anne Perriard, we published different papers about age ans social policy: Les politiques familiales : un révélateur de rapports sociaux, Revue des politiques sociales et familiales 2017, 124, 7-16; L’âge dans les politiques sociales. Traverse, revue d’histoire, 2017, 85-98; Le temps de l’emploi. Chroniques du travail. Cahiers de l’Institut Régional du Travail 2015, 5 (décembre), 94-109; Le rapport social d’âge dans les politiques sociales. Interrogations, revue pluridisciplinaire des sciences de l’homme et de la société, 2014.
Jean-Pierre Tabin
Haute Ecole Specialisee de Suisse Occidentale
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Active social policies revisited by social workers, European Journal of Social Work, February 2016, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/13691457.2015.1131147.
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