ICTs and Professional Autonomy (Paperback)


The advance of ICTs in the human services has generated many concerns, including a proposition that professional autonomy is necessarily compromised. Database systems, and the associated managerialist scrutiny, enable a 'dehumanising' intrusion into the worker/client relations that constitute social casework. ICTs and Professional Autonomy responds to this concern by tracing the historically developed shift from the rituals of self-reflection attached to process recording through to the risk management calculations associated with desktop recording. Dearman's conclusion, based on a post-structuralist analytics of power and knowledge, is that autonomy is not simply a matter of principled freedom from managerial power but rather a disposition to act, which in turn is an outcome of different forms of engagement with changing techniques of representation. As recording practices have shifted, from a profound reliance on process and self-reflection to an abbreviated keying of 'relevant information', so too has the nature of real relations between professional labour and management, and so too has the capacity of professional social workers for 'self-mastery'.

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Product Description

The advance of ICTs in the human services has generated many concerns, including a proposition that professional autonomy is necessarily compromised. Database systems, and the associated managerialist scrutiny, enable a 'dehumanising' intrusion into the worker/client relations that constitute social casework. ICTs and Professional Autonomy responds to this concern by tracing the historically developed shift from the rituals of self-reflection attached to process recording through to the risk management calculations associated with desktop recording. Dearman's conclusion, based on a post-structuralist analytics of power and knowledge, is that autonomy is not simply a matter of principled freedom from managerial power but rather a disposition to act, which in turn is an outcome of different forms of engagement with changing techniques of representation. As recording practices have shifted, from a profound reliance on process and self-reflection to an abbreviated keying of 'relevant information', so too has the nature of real relations between professional labour and management, and so too has the capacity of professional social workers for 'self-mastery'.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

VDM Verlag

Country of origin

Germany

Release date

February 2009

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

February 2009

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 14mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

240

ISBN-13

978-3-639-12841-3

Barcode

9783639128413

Categories

LSN

3-639-12841-9



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