Social Suffering in the Neoliberal Age
State Power, Logics and Resistance
Herausgeber: Soldatic, Karen; St Guillaume, Louise
Social Suffering in the Neoliberal Age
State Power, Logics and Resistance
Herausgeber: Soldatic, Karen; St Guillaume, Louise
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This book provides a rich synthesis of research and theory of nascent and emergent critically engaged work examining changing welfare structures, regimes and technologies and the social suffering that is generated in everyday lives.
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This book provides a rich synthesis of research and theory of nascent and emergent critically engaged work examining changing welfare structures, regimes and technologies and the social suffering that is generated in everyday lives.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 372g
- ISBN-13: 9780367675561
- ISBN-10: 0367675560
- Artikelnr.: 69920288
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 240
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2024
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 372g
- ISBN-13: 9780367675561
- ISBN-10: 0367675560
- Artikelnr.: 69920288
Karen Soldatic is Professor, School of Social Sciences, and Institute Fellow, Institute for Culture and Society, Western Sydney University. Karen's research engages with critical questions of inequality, disability, race and ethnicity, and sexuality and gender diversity under settler-colonial regimes of power and within the global South and East. She obtained her PhD (Distinction) in 2010 from the University of Western Australia. Louise St Guillaume is an Early Career Researcher in the field of disability studies and lecturer and discipline coordinator of sociology at The University of Notre Dame Australia. She was a Summer Scholar at the federal Australian Parliamentary Library in 2014 and the 2019 E.G. Whitlam Fellow at the Whitlam Institute within Western Sydney University. She is currently a Fellow at the Whitlam Institute. Her research often examines how Australian social security policies intersect and operate to govern the lives of people with disability.
0.Introduction: Social suffering and resistance in the social protection
system. Part I: Structure, power and social suffering. 1.'Problem family'
representations: the construction of intergenerational disadvantage in
policy. 2.Corroding motherhood: Australian single mothers' social suffering
and supplication. 3.Violence-induced social suffering and the toxic mix of
automated and privatised social security: the case of the Cashless Debit
Card in Australia. 4.Public service ethics and the Income Compliance
Program. 5.Barriers to recovery: the impact of disability social security
reform on the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians
living with mental health conditions. 6.Neoliberal principles and the
perpetuation of ableism in the economic participation stream of the
Information, Linkages and Capacity Building program. 7.Whose aged care? My
Aged Care representations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
and ageing. 8.Torture in the Meantime: Australia's mandatory detention
regime for asylum seekers. Part II: Practices of resistance and hope.
9.Subjectification, suffering and emotional resistance: life on the
Cashless Debit Card. 10.Universal income and services for people with
disability in Australia: lessons from the blind pension. 11.Neoliberalism
and suffering in higher education: compassionate pedagogy as an act of
resistance. 12.Transforming colonial social suffering: strategies of hope
and resistance by LGBTIQ+ Indigenous peoples in settler-colonial Australia.
13. First Nations organisations and strategies of disruption and resistance
to settler-colonial governance in Australia. 14. Conclusion: Making
suffering legible.
system. Part I: Structure, power and social suffering. 1.'Problem family'
representations: the construction of intergenerational disadvantage in
policy. 2.Corroding motherhood: Australian single mothers' social suffering
and supplication. 3.Violence-induced social suffering and the toxic mix of
automated and privatised social security: the case of the Cashless Debit
Card in Australia. 4.Public service ethics and the Income Compliance
Program. 5.Barriers to recovery: the impact of disability social security
reform on the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians
living with mental health conditions. 6.Neoliberal principles and the
perpetuation of ableism in the economic participation stream of the
Information, Linkages and Capacity Building program. 7.Whose aged care? My
Aged Care representations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
and ageing. 8.Torture in the Meantime: Australia's mandatory detention
regime for asylum seekers. Part II: Practices of resistance and hope.
9.Subjectification, suffering and emotional resistance: life on the
Cashless Debit Card. 10.Universal income and services for people with
disability in Australia: lessons from the blind pension. 11.Neoliberalism
and suffering in higher education: compassionate pedagogy as an act of
resistance. 12.Transforming colonial social suffering: strategies of hope
and resistance by LGBTIQ+ Indigenous peoples in settler-colonial Australia.
13. First Nations organisations and strategies of disruption and resistance
to settler-colonial governance in Australia. 14. Conclusion: Making
suffering legible.
0.Introduction: Social suffering and resistance in the social protection
system. Part I: Structure, power and social suffering. 1.'Problem family'
representations: the construction of intergenerational disadvantage in
policy. 2.Corroding motherhood: Australian single mothers' social suffering
and supplication. 3.Violence-induced social suffering and the toxic mix of
automated and privatised social security: the case of the Cashless Debit
Card in Australia. 4.Public service ethics and the Income Compliance
Program. 5.Barriers to recovery: the impact of disability social security
reform on the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians
living with mental health conditions. 6.Neoliberal principles and the
perpetuation of ableism in the economic participation stream of the
Information, Linkages and Capacity Building program. 7.Whose aged care? My
Aged Care representations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
and ageing. 8.Torture in the Meantime: Australia's mandatory detention
regime for asylum seekers. Part II: Practices of resistance and hope.
9.Subjectification, suffering and emotional resistance: life on the
Cashless Debit Card. 10.Universal income and services for people with
disability in Australia: lessons from the blind pension. 11.Neoliberalism
and suffering in higher education: compassionate pedagogy as an act of
resistance. 12.Transforming colonial social suffering: strategies of hope
and resistance by LGBTIQ+ Indigenous peoples in settler-colonial Australia.
13. First Nations organisations and strategies of disruption and resistance
to settler-colonial governance in Australia. 14. Conclusion: Making
suffering legible.
system. Part I: Structure, power and social suffering. 1.'Problem family'
representations: the construction of intergenerational disadvantage in
policy. 2.Corroding motherhood: Australian single mothers' social suffering
and supplication. 3.Violence-induced social suffering and the toxic mix of
automated and privatised social security: the case of the Cashless Debit
Card in Australia. 4.Public service ethics and the Income Compliance
Program. 5.Barriers to recovery: the impact of disability social security
reform on the lives of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians
living with mental health conditions. 6.Neoliberal principles and the
perpetuation of ableism in the economic participation stream of the
Information, Linkages and Capacity Building program. 7.Whose aged care? My
Aged Care representations of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
and ageing. 8.Torture in the Meantime: Australia's mandatory detention
regime for asylum seekers. Part II: Practices of resistance and hope.
9.Subjectification, suffering and emotional resistance: life on the
Cashless Debit Card. 10.Universal income and services for people with
disability in Australia: lessons from the blind pension. 11.Neoliberalism
and suffering in higher education: compassionate pedagogy as an act of
resistance. 12.Transforming colonial social suffering: strategies of hope
and resistance by LGBTIQ+ Indigenous peoples in settler-colonial Australia.
13. First Nations organisations and strategies of disruption and resistance
to settler-colonial governance in Australia. 14. Conclusion: Making
suffering legible.