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Professional fluidity: reconceptualising the professional status of self-employed neo-professionals

Professional fluidity: reconceptualising the professional status of self-employed neo-professionals
Professional fluidity: reconceptualising the professional status of self-employed neo-professionals
Current debates and definitions of professionalism are primarily grounded in organisations, either as employing bureaucracies or service firms, that control and structure expert labour. This is problematic as it neglects the many neo-professionals that are self-employed. We draw on interviews with 50 independent consultants and find that, outside of organisational boundaries, they pursue a strategy of professional fluidity. This is a relational and market-driven approach that requires a multiplicity of roles and chameleon-like tactics. As opposed to notions of collegial, organisational and corporate professionalisation, professional fluidity is a co-constructed and agentic approach where validity and legitimacy are achieved primarily through relations with clients and collaborators rather than institutions or employing organisations. Through professional fluidity we contribute to a more holistic understanding of professionalism that is sensitive to the employment mode rather than knowledge domain and develops existing notions of who is a professional. This is important for wider debates on the current and future state of professions.
consultants, future of work, professional fluidity, professions, self-employment
0170-8406
1-22
Cross, David
a240c578-1f07-45d8-b2f5-a61d71ec061d
Swart, Juani
ecd832c7-e558-4dc1-99c4-088fb5e0a786
Cross, David
a240c578-1f07-45d8-b2f5-a61d71ec061d
Swart, Juani
ecd832c7-e558-4dc1-99c4-088fb5e0a786

Cross, David and Swart, Juani (2020) Professional fluidity: reconceptualising the professional status of self-employed neo-professionals. Organization Studies, 0, 1-22. (doi:10.1177/0170840620964985).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Current debates and definitions of professionalism are primarily grounded in organisations, either as employing bureaucracies or service firms, that control and structure expert labour. This is problematic as it neglects the many neo-professionals that are self-employed. We draw on interviews with 50 independent consultants and find that, outside of organisational boundaries, they pursue a strategy of professional fluidity. This is a relational and market-driven approach that requires a multiplicity of roles and chameleon-like tactics. As opposed to notions of collegial, organisational and corporate professionalisation, professional fluidity is a co-constructed and agentic approach where validity and legitimacy are achieved primarily through relations with clients and collaborators rather than institutions or employing organisations. Through professional fluidity we contribute to a more holistic understanding of professionalism that is sensitive to the employment mode rather than knowledge domain and develops existing notions of who is a professional. This is important for wider debates on the current and future state of professions.

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Main Document - Professional Fluidity FINAL - with Tables - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 September 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 September 2020
Keywords: consultants, future of work, professional fluidity, professions, self-employment

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 443993
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/443993
ISSN: 0170-8406
PURE UUID: 5a5bf310-f71d-488b-a4a4-a08b6914eefd
ORCID for David Cross: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7984-3718

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Date deposited: 21 Sep 2020 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:54

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Contributors

Author: David Cross ORCID iD
Author: Juani Swart

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