‘We’ve got a file on you’: problematising families in poverty in four periods of austerity
‘We’ve got a file on you’: problematising families in poverty in four periods of austerity
This article considers a genealogy of the governing by data of families in poverty; a case study of the codification of disadvantaged families and problematisation of their difficulties over the course of a century and a half. Influenced by Bacchi’s ‘what the problem is represented to be’ approach, we explore a genealogy of the micro acts of ruling that reveal the practice of constructing and governing of disadvantaged families. We draw on a case study analysis of materials recorded and collected by the Charity Organisation Society and its subsequent guises, during four major periods of recession in Britain, from the late 19th century to the early 21st century. We outline the ‘problematisation’ approach to governance that underpins our discussion before describing the administrative records with which we worked. We argue that the genealogy of the construction, positioning and governance of poor families over time in this case may be observed in terms of three key shifts in problematisation: (i) from the identification of deservingness towards the assessment of risk; (ii) from a gendered concentration of parents to the perceived needs of children; and (iii) from consultation of authority figures to a reliance on increasingly ‘professionalised’ data capture tools.
British welfare state, Charity Organisation Society, Disadvantaged families, Dividing practices, Economic recession, Governance, Poverty analytics, Problematisation
227-244
Horsley, Nicola
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Gillies, Val
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Edwards, Rosalind
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1 June 2020
Horsley, Nicola
e1ee0dd8-f81a-471d-9a92-ebabb9036edf
Gillies, Val
9c9bcf7c-be6d-4fce-bc64-4df1c1953db1
Edwards, Rosalind
e43912c0-f149-4457-81a9-9c4e00a4bb42
Horsley, Nicola, Gillies, Val and Edwards, Rosalind
(2020)
‘We’ve got a file on you’: problematising families in poverty in four periods of austerity.
Journal of Poverty and Social Justice, 28 (2), .
(doi:10.1332/175982720X15791324075050).
Abstract
This article considers a genealogy of the governing by data of families in poverty; a case study of the codification of disadvantaged families and problematisation of their difficulties over the course of a century and a half. Influenced by Bacchi’s ‘what the problem is represented to be’ approach, we explore a genealogy of the micro acts of ruling that reveal the practice of constructing and governing of disadvantaged families. We draw on a case study analysis of materials recorded and collected by the Charity Organisation Society and its subsequent guises, during four major periods of recession in Britain, from the late 19th century to the early 21st century. We outline the ‘problematisation’ approach to governance that underpins our discussion before describing the administrative records with which we worked. We argue that the genealogy of the construction, positioning and governance of poor families over time in this case may be observed in terms of three key shifts in problematisation: (i) from the identification of deservingness towards the assessment of risk; (ii) from a gendered concentration of parents to the perceived needs of children; and (iii) from consultation of authority figures to a reliance on increasingly ‘professionalised’ data capture tools.
Text
2019 12 JPSJ accepted manuscript
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 15 January 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 May 2020
Published date: 1 June 2020
Keywords:
British welfare state, Charity Organisation Society, Disadvantaged families, Dividing practices, Economic recession, Governance, Poverty analytics, Problematisation
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Local EPrints ID: 445054
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/445054
ISSN: 1759-8273
PURE UUID: bfb00b69-c6c9-4c5f-bd58-24e9085caac4
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Date deposited: 18 Nov 2020 17:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:04
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Author:
Nicola Horsley
Author:
Val Gillies
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