Social Policy. Fiona Williams

Social Policy - Fiona Williams


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experiences to the wider systemic patterns of power and privilege. This means making clear the connections between social, cultural, political and economic injustices so that the nature of the political economy – a form of global financialized capitalism which is patriarchal and racializing – becomes an essential part of the frame of analysis in a way that is neither reductionist nor singly causal, nor monolithic, but allows for its contradictory nature. In synthesizing a critical and an intersectional social policy analysis in this book, the intention is to enhance each in a way that is attentive to the criticisms of both, to build an analysis which can follow through to its political implications.

      In the previous chapter I drew attention to the UK Social Policy Association’s report on the continuing marginalization of race and racism in social policy teaching. I have explained in this chapter how this marginalizing effect can be seen in other inequalities research but is most marked for race and racism scholarship. In that context, does using an analysis that focuses on the intersections of different social relations of inequality obscure the racialized differences that really matter? A similar argument from a different perspective might be: by focusing on the intersections between different power relations, I am bound to dilute the entrenched and systematic patterns of gender subordination (or disability, or sexuality, or childhood). Obviously this is possible, but intersectionality is a method that depends on prior understanding of different social relations of power. Applying it requires sensitivity to the contingent nature of political context and to the question of salience. In other words, we have to understand the historical, material and cultural specificities of particular forms of social relations: to be aware of the variability in social, economic, cultural and political salience of different social relations at different times and places to the issues we are researching.

      For the analysis in this book, the contemporary context of welfare states and political struggle demands an analysis that can capture not only these intersections of inequality but also those interconnections between different areas of crisis which help shape them. The crises of financialized capital, of care and social reproduction, of climate change and of the racializing of borders are further made salient by the struggles they have provoked (see chapters 3, 5 and 7). This highlights, for example, the salience of bordering practices within the UK’s austerity welfare state in which the processes of restricting the rights of asylum seekers have been extended to different categories of benefit claimant. Such connection requires a frame of analysis that allows for the interconnections without reneging on the specificities of gender or race or class (see chapter 4). That said, it is a tricky exercise where I am aware of the limitations in the scope of my knowledge (see appendix II).

      An important contribution to refining the methodology of intersectionality is Leslie McCall’s work (McCall 2005). She distinguishes between three approaches. Representing these on a continuum, the first, and probably least used, is anticategorical complexity, which focuses on deconstructing analytical categories and rendering them fluid and constantly unstable. The second, intracategorical complexity, retains a critical eye to the boundaries by which categories are defined and constructed but is interested in the points of intersection between multiple categories and their shifting social relations. This approach reveals the erasure of those experiences forged through such intersections (as in the original meaning of intersectionality in black feminist struggle and the point made by Hankivsky and Jordan-Zachery in the quotation above). The third approach, intercategorical complexity, while acknowledging the fluidity of social categories, nevertheless employs them as ‘anchor points’ (Glenn 2002, cited in McCall 2005: 1785) in order to investigate, indeed to measure, the extent and shifting of social relations of inequality between and across multiple groups. This follows a strategic categorizing in order to generate a more complex and comparative picture of power and inequality. It focuses not on the ways single groups transect different forms of subordination and domination but on the overall patterns across multiple groups. This, McCall argues, is the least practised of the three approaches but is the one which she unfolds when drawing upon her quantitative analysis of patterns of class and racial inequalities among women in the United States (McCall 2001). The emerging picture is one of complexity in which no single dimension of inequality predominates and in which the context of place in particular shapes the patterns of class, race and gender inequalities. Such an approach is important in that it goes beyond the use in quantitative methods of social categories as static variables and it is particularly useful to social policy in which the measurement of poverty and inequality is integral to its


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