伤害的管理:从意外后果到故意伤害

IF 2.3 2区 社会学 Q1 SOCIAL ISSUES Critical Social Policy Pub Date : 2022-04-07 DOI:10.1177/02610183221087333
A. Broom, M. Peterie, Katherine Kenny, G. Ramia, Nadine Ehlers
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引用次数: 6

摘要

危害是社会科学中反复出现的主题。一系列实证领域的学者记录了社会结构、制度和治理体系有时产生的有害结果。然而,这些危害往往被称为“意外后果”。系统的结果被设计成看起来没有意图,在没有任何明确机构参与的情况下运行,因此特别善于逃避问责结构和责任形式。本文从几十年的社会理论以及澳大利亚卫生、福利和移民系统中的三个例证中得出见解,认为许多社会结构实际上是为了造成伤害,但其设计目的并不是为了看起来造成伤害。在提出这一论点时,我们为将伤害概念化为积极管理提供了一个理论框架。我们还向来自社会科学界的学者提出挑战,要求他们重新考虑“意外后果”的部分非政治化叙事,并更大胆地说出渗透到社会生活中的预期危害,这些危害往往为强大的政治和经济利益服务。
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The administration of harm: From unintended consequences to harm by design
Harm is a recurring theme in the social sciences. Scholars in a range of empirical areas have documented the deleterious outcomes that at times emerge from social structures, institutions and systems of governance. Yet these harms have often been presented under the rubric of ‘unintended consequences’. The outcomes of systems are designed to appear devoid of intentionality, in motion without any clear agency involved, and are thus particularly adept at evading accountability structures and forms of responsibility. Drawing insights from decades of social theory – as well as three illustrative examples from Australia's health, welfare and immigration systems – this article argues that many social structures are in fact intended to cause harm, but designed not to appear so. In presenting this argument, we offer a theoretical framework for conceptualising harm as actively administered. We also challenge scholars from across the social sciences to reconsider the partially depoliticising narrative of ‘unintended consequences’, and to be bolder in naming the intended harms that permeate social life, often serving powerful political and economic interests.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
49
期刊介绍: Critical Social Policy provides a forum for advocacy, analysis and debate on social policy issues. We publish critical perspectives which: ·acknowledge and reflect upon differences in political, economic, social and cultural power and upon the diversity of cultures and movements shaping social policy; ·re-think conventional approaches to securing rights, meeting needs and challenging inequalities and injustices; ·include perspectives, analyses and concerns of people and groups whose voices are unheard or underrepresented in policy-making; ·reflect lived experiences of users of existing benefits and services;
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