Welfare offices usually attract negative descriptions of bureaucracy with their queues, routines, and impersonal nature. Are they anonymous machines or the locus of neutral service relationships? Showing how people experience state public administration, The Bureaucrat and the Poor provides a realistic view of French welfare policies, institutions and reforms and, in doing so, dispels both of these myths.
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'By emphasising the encounters of the least powerful state actors and our least powerful citizens, Dubois presents a different, at once more troubling and hopeful view of the administrative state. Throughout The Bureaucrat and the Poor the emphasis remains on the fragility of social roles: nothing is so fixed as to prove immutable; all is contested and in play. For students and scholars of administration and policy, these are essential insights and well worth the read to appreciate in full.' Steven Maynard-Moody, The University of Kansas, USA 'This first-rate ethnography provides a unique vista point from which to understand how public policy translates into mundane dealings with marginal populations. By mating the theories of Bourdieu, Goffman and Lipsky, The Bureaucrat and the Poor delivers the best analysis yet of the specificity of bureaucratic domination and makes a signal contribution to the comparative sociology of welfare reform in the neoliberal era.' Loïc Wacquant, University of California, Berkeley, USA 'A lucid, well-written and well-organised account of everyday bureaucracy at the welfare agency's window, solidly based on observation: first-class empirical sociology, savvy, streetwise, and with a wicked sense of clients' covert tactics. French bureaucrats and their clients are clearly not unique: as Dubois portrays them they look uncannily familiar.' Abram de Swaan, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands 'Vincent Dubois' newly translated The Bureaucrat and the Poor: Encounters in French Welfare Offices provides an ethnographic "insider's" look at the double role enacted by welfare workers as they encounter their clients. In his ethnographer's role, Dubois follows these street-level bureaucrats up close and personal, and explores the workers' "double bodied-ness" as they juggle at one and the same time their administrative roles and responsibilities with their human compassion for the misery of the poor with whom they interact an