Title: Social Welfare Policy Analysis
1Social Welfare Policy Analysis
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IN TECHNOLOGICAL WIZARDRY AND PEDAGOGICAL
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2NOTA BENE (TAKE HEED!)
- SLIDES 2-23 CONTAIN INTRODUCTORY MATERIALS.
- MODULE I BEGINS WITH SLIDE 24.
-
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8SEMESTER OVERVIEW (1) MODULE TOPICS
- MODULE I CRITICAL THINKING
- (3 CLASS SESSIONS)
- PURPOSE
- To familiarize you with opposing perspectives on
social reality and social welfare policy (swp)
so as to ensure that you have the conceptual
overview needed to analyze specific issues. - MODULE II SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY (SWP)
- (2 CLASS SESSIONS)
- PURPOSE
- Introduction to swp origins, types, and trends,
as well as the role of politics in the policy
making process. - MODULE III THE WELFARE STATE (WS)
- (2 CLASS SESSIONS)
- PURPOSE
- Emphasis on types of WSs and the impact of
globalization. Special attention to American
exceptionalism as a key to understanding the US
WS.
9SEMESTER OVERVIEW (2) MODULE TOPICS
- MODULE IV POVERTY/INEQUALITY
- (2 CLASS SESSIONS)
- PURPOSE
- Poverty and inequality are the bottom line
issues for social workers because they are the
everyday realities confronted by the professions
traditional clientele. This module explains the
origins and dimensions of these phenomena and
relates both to the overall direction of the
American political economy. - MODULE V HEALTH
- (3 CLASS SESSIONS)
- PURPOSE
- As individuals, professionals, and citizens,
social workers have a special interest in health
care policy, especially now that managed care has
transformed their own role as practitioners.
10SEMESTER OVERVIEW (3) MODULE SCHEDULE
- MODULE IV POVERTY/INEQUALITY
- 6/13 19
- READINGS
- PART III 13, 16, 20, 21, 23
- MODULE V HEALTH PHYSICAL MENTAL/YOUNG
OLD/PAST FUTURE - READINGS PART III, 15, 16, 18.
- 6/20 26 27
- PAPER TAKE HOME FINAL
- DUE 6/27
- INTRODUCTION - 5/15
- MODULE 1 - CRITICAL THINKNG
- 5/16 22 - 23
- READINGS
- MAINSTREAM
- LIBERALISM PART II, 8-10
- CONSERVATISM PART VI, 25 PART II, 11
- RADICAL (called institutional/critical)
- PART IV, 24 PART IV, 26 (393-4/397-99
(TOP)/402-406 - MODULE II - SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY - 5/30 6/5
- READINGS PART I, 1, 4
- MODULE III THE WELFARE STATE 6/6 12
- READINGS PART I, 2-3 PART V
- IN-CLASS MID-SEMESTER QUIZ
- 6/6
11SEMESTER OVERVIEW (4) THE CUMULATIVE ANGLE
- SPECIFIC SWPS
- DETAILED SURVEY OF SOME MAJOR U.S. SWPS.
- MODULES IV/V
- THE WELFARE STATE (WS)
- THE TOTALITY OF ALL SWPS AND THEIR RELATED
INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXTS WITHIN A GIVEN NATIONAL
ENVIRONMENT. - MODULE III
- SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY (SWP)
- INTRODUCTION TO THE CONCEPT AND RELATED ISSUES
- TYPES AND POLITICS OF SWP
- MODULE II
- CRITICAL THINKNG
- PROVIDES THE ANALYTICAL FOUNDATION AND FRAMEWORK
- FOR ALL SPECIFIC TOPICS ADDRESSED IN THIS COURSE
- MODULE i
12SEMESTER OVERVIEW (5) KEY CONCEPTUAL DIMENSIONS
OF THIS COURSE
- Theoretical
- The functions of swps within the overall host
society. Key question Are swps mere palliatives
or are they evidence that sustained social
progress is possible in a competitive,
individualistically oriented market economy? - 2. Political
- Who are the political motives and forces
supporting or opposing progressive swps? What are
their motives? Why are particular policies
enacted? Who benefits and who loses? Key
question Which political direction---liberal,
conservative, or ?----are future policies most
likely to take? - 3. Institutional
- What are the institutional contexts and mechanics
within which policy is made. That is, what are
the actual procedures of policy making and how
does this process affect actual policy outcomes?
Key question What have been the major
institutional changes of recent years and how
have these impacted swp legislation? - 4. Applied
- Seeks to understand policy specifics for
practical administrative reasons and to assess
the ground level impact such specifics have on
client populations. Key question What are the
actual contents of specific swps what problems
are encountered by those seeking to apply them in
the field?
13SEMESTER OVERVIEW (6) MID-SEMESTER QUIZ
- Purpose
- The 40 minute in-class mid-semester quiz
(to be completed in bluebooks) will account for
20 of your final grade. Its main purpose is to
help acclimate you to the standards expected in
this course. Most of you should have no problem
meeting those standards, but for those who do,
the quiz will alert you to the need to upgrade on
the final exam and semester paper. - YOU WILL CHOOSE 1 OF THE 2 FOLLOWING QUESTIONS
- Discuss why politics is so important in
understanding social welfare policy and why one
variety of politics---the conservative one---has
been so dominant in shaping policy in recent
years. - The welfare state is being rapidly transformed
both here and abroad. What are the main factors
accounting for this change. Also discuss the
likely direction the welfare state during the
first quarter of the 21st century?
14SEMESTER OVERVIEW (7) FINAL EXAM AND FINAL PAPER
- CHOOSE 1 OF THE FOLLOWING 3 QUESTIONS FOR YOUR
FINAL EXAM AND 1 FOR THE PAPER. EACH WILL BE
WORTH 40 YOUR FINAL GRADE UNLESS YOU DECIDE TO
SUBMIT ONLY ONE, WHICH WILL THEN BE WORTH 80 OF
YOUR FINAL GRADE. - Apply either a mainstream or radical perspective
to one of the issues addressed in this course.
(You can also choose an issue not covered in
class, if you so desire.) Explain why you think
the approach chosen does a better job than the
alternatives in analyzing the selected issue. - What exactly is American exceptionalism and
how has it influenced U.S. social welfare
policies? - Discuss in documented detail how the contents of
this class have affected your thinking as a
future social worker.
15FINAL EXAM AND FINAL PAPER SPECIFICATIONS
- Both the exam and paper will be completed at
home. - Each should be 2x spaced, typed, and stapled or
other- wise securely fastened. - The paper should be no more than 10 pages in
length the exam, no more than 8 pages. - You may elect to submit only one of these
assignments, but if you do, its results will
constitute 80 of your grade. - You cannot use the same question for both.
- Please do not ask me to discuss hypothetical
answers to the exam or paper.
16WHAT DOES THIS GUY WANT FROM ME?
- ANSWER
- RELAX IM YOUR TEACHER, NOT YOUR PERSECUTOR
- ABOVE ALL, I WANT YOU TO THINK ABOUT WHAT IT IS
YOU ARE LEARNING. INDEED, IF YOU DO NOT THINK YOU
ARE NOT LEARNING, AND IF YOU ARE NOT LEARNING,
YOU ARE WASTING BOTH YOUR TIME AND MINE. - LOGICALLY AND COHERENTLY COMMUNICATE WHAT YOU
THINK ON THE EXAMS/PAPER. - CONVINCE ME THAT YOU HAVE REALLY THOUGHT ABOUT
THE DIFFICULT ISSUES IN THIS CLASS. - ANY QUESTIONS?
17OTHER PRELIMINARY MATTERS
(SLIDES 16-22 CAN BE
SKIMMED)
18- THIS VERSION OF SOCIAL WORK 821 IS IN STRICT
CONFORMITY WITH THE - CSWE GUIDELINES ON SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY
EDUCATION - NASW CODE OF ETHICS
- MSU GUIDING PRINCIPLES
19- CSWE GUIDELINES
- M6.10 SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY/SERVICES
- THE FOUNDATION SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY AND SERVICES
CONTENT MUST INCLUDE THE HISTORY, MISSION, AND
PHILOSOPHY OF THE SOCIAL WORK PROFESSION. CONTENT
MUST BE PRESENTED ABOUT THE HISTORY AND CURRENT
PATTERNS OF PROVISION OF SOCIAL WELFARE SERVICES,
THE ROLE OF SOCIAL POLICY IN HELPING OR DETERRING
PEOPLE IN THE MAINTENANCE OR ATTAINMENT OF
OPTIMAL HEALTH AND WELL-BEING, AND THE EFFECT OF
POLICY ON SOCIAL WELFARE PRACTICE. STUDENTS MUST
BE TAUGHT TO ANALYZE CURRENT SOCIAL POLICY WITHIN
THE CONTEXT OF HISTORICAL AND CONTEMPORARY
FACTORS THAT SHAPE POLICY. CONTENTS MUST BE
PRESENTED ABOUT THE POLITICAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL
PROCESSES USED TO INFLUENCE POLICY, THE PROCESS
OF POLICY FORMULATION, AND THE FRAMEWORKS FOR
ANALYZING SOCIAL PROCESSES IN LIGHT OF THE
PRINCIPLES OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE.
20- CSWE GUIDELINES
- M6.7 PROMOTION OF SOCIAL/ECO. JUSTICE
- PROGRAMS OF SOCIAL WORK EDUCATION MUST PROVIDE AN
UNDERSTANDING OF THE DYNAMICS AND CONSEQUENCES OF
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC INJUSTICE, INCLUDING ALL
FORMS OF HUMAN OPPRESSION AND DISCRIMINATION.
THEY MUST PROVIDE STUDENTS WITH THE SKILLS TO
PROMOTE SOCIAL CHANGE AND TO IMPLEMENT A WIDE
VARIETY OF INTERVENTIONS THAT FURTHER THE
ACHIEVEMENT OF INDIVIDUAL AND COLLECTIVE SOCIAL
AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE. THEORETICAL AND PRACTICE
CONTENT MUST BE PROVIDED ABOUT STRATEGIES OF
INTERVENTION FOR ACHIEVING SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC
JUSTICE AND OR COMBATING THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS
OF INSTITUTIONALIZED FORMS OF OPPRESSION.
21- NASW CODE OF ETHICS
- SOCIAL WORKERS PRIMARY GOAL IS TO HELP PEOPLE IN
NEED AND TO ADDRESS SOCIAL PROBLEMS. - SOCIAL WORKERS CHALLENGE SOCIAL INJUSTICE
22- MSU GUIDING PRINCIPLES
- PEOPLE MATTER
- ACTIVE LEARNING ACROSS
- THE MISSION
IN HOC SIGNO VINCES
23AD ASTRA ET PROJECT
RECIPIENT SPECIAL MENSCHEN AWARD AMERICAN
ACADEMY OF POWERPOINT PROJECTIONISTS
24 MODULE I CRITICAL THINKING READINGS (IN
ORDER) PARTS II, 8 10 VI, 25 IIPART
II, 11 IV 24, 26 (393-4/ 397-99/402-406)
25JANE ADDAMS MEMORIAL by MITCHELL SIPORIN ILLINOIS
FEDERAL ARTS PROJECT, WORKS PROJECT
ADMINISTRATIONS (WPA), 1936
26WHY START A COURSE ON SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY (SWP)
WITH AN ART SLIDE?
- BECAUSE
- ITS BEAUTIFUL, AND BEAUTY IS ITS OWN
JUSTIFICATION. - JANE ADDAMS IS THE GREATEST HERO IN THE HISTORY
OF SOCIAL WORK, AND, LIKE OTHER PEOPLE, SOCIAL
WORKERS NEED HEROES TO INSPIRE THEM. - THE MURAL PROVES THAT THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT ONCE
SPENT MONEY ON BEAUTIFUL THINGS THAT DENOUNCED
THE UGLY THINGS WAR, SEXISM, RACISM, AND CLASS
OPPRESSION. - IN POLITICAL ALLIANCE WITH OTHERS, SOCIAL WORKERS
NEED TO REDOUBLE THE FIGHT AGAINST THOSE UGLY
THINGS. - LEARNING ABOUT SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY CAN HELP TO
PREPARE YOU TO PARTICIPATE IN THAT STRUGGLE.
27WHY MODULE I IS IMPORTANT (1)
- VIRTUALLY ALL SOCIAL SCIENCE/SOCIAL POLICY
RESEARCH IS STEEPED IN, BUT NOT NECESSARILY
LABELED AS, EITHER MAINSTREAM OR RADICAL
THINKING. THAT IS, SOCIAL WORK AND, MORE
GENERALLY, SOCIAL SCIENCE ARE INHERENTLY
POLITICAL IN NATURE, INSOFAR AS THEY INVOLVE
POWER RELATIONSHIPS, AS INDEED DOES ALL OF HUMAN
LIFE. - IT IS THEREFORE ESSENTIAL THAT YOU LEARN TO
IDENTIFY AND ASSESS THESE DIVERGENT APPROACHES
AND DECIDE WHICH OFFERS BETTER INSIGHTS INTO THE
COMPLEX POLICY ISSUES DEALT WITH IN THIS CLASS.
IN OTHER WORDS, YOU MUST LEARN TO THINK
CRITICALLY!
28WHY MODULE I IS IMPORTANT (2)
- ANOTHER WAY OF STATING THIS SAME POINT IS TO SAY
THAT. - IF CRITICAL THINKING IS A KEY TO UNDERSTANDING
SOCIAL WELFARE POLICY, THEN UNDERSTANDING THE
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MAINSTREAM - RADICAL THINKING
- IS THE KEY TO CRITICAL
- THINKING.
-
29ARE YOU A MAINSTREAM OR OR A RADICAL THINKER?
LETS SEE WHICH OF THESE APPROACHES BEST
REFLECTS THE WAY YOU LOOK AT THE WORLD!
30THE U.S. POLITICAL SPECTRUM
- U.S. VIEW OF THE POLITICAL SPECTRUM
- LEFT RIGHT
- LIBERAL
CONSERVATIVE - (New Deal/Great Society)
(Reagan/Bush) - THE POLITICAL SPECTRUM VIEWED FROM ABROAD
- RADICAL
MAINSTREAM
RIGHT - LEFT MARXIST SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC
LIBERAL CONSERVATIVE MONARHCHIST FASCIST - (CRITICAL)
(INSTITUTIONAL) - THAT IS, VIEWED FROM OUTSIDE THE U.S., AMERICAN
POLITICAL DIVISIONS SEEM VERY NARROW RATHER THAN
BEING DIAMETRICAL OPPOSITES, AS AMERICANS
GENERALLY BELIEVE, LIBERALISM AND CONSERVATISM
ARE SEEN AS NOT THAT DIFFERENT FROM ONE
ANOTHER---IN OTHER WORDS, AS BEING TWO FACETS OF
THE SAME MAINSTREAM. THE MEANING OF THESE
DISTINCTIONS WILL BECOME CLEARER AS WE LOOK AT
THESE CONCEPTS MORE CLOSELY. - ALTERNATE TERMS USED IN THE ASSIGNED TEXT
CHAPTERS.
31WHAT LIBERALS AND CONSERVATIVES SHARE
AMERICAN POLITICAL MAINSTREAM
CONSERVATISM
LIBERALISM
32MAINSTREAM U.S. POLITICAL THINKING A SUMMARY (1)
- LIBERALS AND CONSERVATIVES BOTH BELIEVE THAT
IDEAS ULTIMATELY DETERMINE SOCIAL REALITY. THUS,
OUR ECONOMIC POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS WERE
INSPIRED BY AND CREATED TO PRACTICE, PROMOTE,
DEFEND THE IDEAS OF DEMOCRACY, FREE ENTERPRISE,
EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY. - WHILE OUR IDEAS AND VALUES REFLECT OUR NATIONAL
EXPERIENCE, AND FUEL OUR PERSONAL ASPIRATIONS,
THEIR VALUE IS REALLY UNIVERSAL. WE AND OTHER
PEOPLES CHERISH THEM BECAUSE THEY WORK.
33MAINSTREAM A SUMMARY (2)
- POPULAR ACCEPTANCE OF POWERFUL IDEAS/VALUES, LIKE
THOSE JUST CITED, CONSTITUTES SOCIAL PROGRESS.
SUCH IDEAS ALWAYS EXIST IN THE ABSTRACT, BUT
THEIR ONGOING INCORPORATION INTO REAL LIFE
DEMONSTRATES THAT HUMANKIND IS INDEED EVOLVING
TOWARDS A HIGHER LEVEL. - THE U.S. HAS BEEN THE WORLDS MORAL AND POLITICAL
LEADER BECAUSE ITS IDEAS AND VALUES HAVE
REPEATEDLY PROVEN TO BE THE CORRECT ONES---THEY
HAVE BEEN MORE EFFECTIVE IN PROMOTING HUMAN
BETTERMENT THAN ANY IN HISTORY.
34MAINSTREAM A SUMMARY (3)
- On the other hand,
LEAD TO
UNDEMOCRATIC POLITICAL IDEAS
UNDEMOCRATIC AND ROTTEN RESULTS
35THE MAINSTREAM CONCEPTIONS OF POLITICS A
NATIONAL DIALOGUE IN IDEAS
- Political campaigning is ostensibly about ideas
candidates are supposed to present their ideas so
that we voters can decide who is better prepared
to lead the country. - That politics has descended into mere
personality contests is thus widely deplored,
precisely because it deprives voters of rational
choices among competing ideas. - A further specifically American presumption is
that liberalism and conservatism are the only
appropriate idea frameworks (ideologies) for
policy proposals. (Elsewhere, as noted in slide
30, the ideological spectrum tends to be wider.) - Both ideologies are thus squarely within the
mainstream by world standards, and both share key
assumptions about social and political reality.
36MAINSTREAM POLITICAL IDEAS LIBERALISM AND
CONSERVATISM
- THE POLITICAL SUBSETS OF AMERICAN MAINSTREAMISM
- WHILE LIBERALISM AND CONSERVATISM ACCEPT THE SAME
BASIC GENERAL ORIENTATION, THEY DO DIFFER ON THE
FOLLOWING SPECIFICS
- LIBERALISM
- EXPANDED SOCIAL WELFARE POLICIES
- GREATER EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY
- ENHANCED GOVERNMENT REGULATION, AS
- NECESSARY FOR SOCIETY AS A WHOLE
- REDUCED CORPORATE INFLUENCE VIA CAMPAIGN
- LAW CHANGES AND OTHER REFORMS
- PROGRESSIVE TAXATION
- STRONG ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTIONSIM
- CONSERVATISM
- MAXIMUM FEASIBLE SWP PRIVATIZATION
- SOCIAL MOBILITY VIA INDIVIDUAL EFFORT
- REDUCED GOVERNMENT REGULATION IN
- FAVOR OF MARKET MECHANISMS
- PROMOTION OF CORPORATE PROFITS AND
- MINIMAL CHANGES IN CAMPAIGN LAWS
- FLATTER TAXES
- WEAKER ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTIONS
37CONSERVATISM
- CONSERVATIVES BELIEVE THAT ADOPTION OF THEIR
IDEAS RESULT IN MORE EFFICIENT AND EFFECTIVE
GOVERNMENT. - THEY ARE CONVINCED THAT GOVERNMENT ECO
INTERVENTION SHOULD BE MINIMIZED, SO THAT EACH
INDIVIDUAL HAS BOTH THE DISCRETION AND OBLIGATION
TO PARTICIPATE IN OUR FREE MARKET SYSTEM.
38LIBERALISM
- LIBERALS (SOMETIMES CALLED PROGRESSIVES, A
CATEGORY THAT INCLUDES MOST SOCIAL WORKERS) ARE
LIKEWISE CONVINCED IN THE MORAL AND LOGICAL
SUPERIORITY OF THEIR IDEAS. - THEY CONTEND THAT GOVERNMENT SHOULD PURSUE EQUAL
INDIVIDUAL OPPORTUNITY AND SOMEWHAT GREATER
EQUALITY OF OUTCOME IN OTHER WORDS, THAT
GOVERNMENT SHOULD HELP TO MAXIMIZE SOCIAL
MOBILITY, WHILE LIMITING THE GAP BETWEEN RICH
POOR. CHALLENGING INJUSTICE, AS ADVOCATED BY
THE NASW CODE, IS THUS A TYPICAL EXPRESSION OF
THE LIBERAL CREDO.
39LIBERALISM VERSUS CONSERVATISM SPECIFIC ISSUES
- LETS LOOK AT SOME SPECIFIC ISSUES IN ORDER TO
ILLUSTRATE THE COMMON MAINSTREAM WAY OF
INTERPRETING SOCIAL REALITY. FOR EXAMPLE
40A MAINSTREAM VIEW OF SOCIAL WORK
- SOCIAL WORK IS ABOUT
- 1. HELPING TO EMPOWER INDIVIDUAL PEOPLE
- SO THAT THEY HAVE GREATER
- CONTROL OVER THEIR LIVES.
- 2. PROVIDING THERAPY
- TO THOSE INDIVIDUALS IN NEED OF SUCH
- SERVICES.
- 3. SUPPORTING PASSAGE OF PROGRESSIVE SWPS IN
ORDER TO PROMOTE DIVERSITY, SOCIAL JUSTICE AND
EQUALITY.
41A MAINSTREAM EXAMPLE INDIVIDUALISM (1)
- The following illustration shows how one key
mainstream value, individualism, helps to shape
our institutions. From a mainstream perspective,
our whole lives are quite appropriately based on
the individualist ethos, whereby each person
(individual) is responsible for his/her fate.
Those who fail accordingly do so because they
lack the right stuff. This belief necessarily
obstructs sympathy for the poor, whom many (a
majority of?) affluent Americans conclude have
the wrong stuff as individuals. Hence their
poverty is perceived as merited.
42MAINSTREAM THINKING AND INDIVIDUALISM (2)
ALL OUR INSTITUTIONS ARE BASED ON THIS BELIEF IN
INDIVIDUALISM
THAT THE INDIVIDUAL IS THE THE FUNDAMENTAL UNIT
OF SOCIETY IS THE PIVOTAL IDEA IN
AMERICAN SOCIETY
43ANOTHER EXAMPLE RACISM (1)
-
-
- Here again, the outlook should be familiar,
not least because most Americans essentially
share the same mainstream view on this sensitive
subject.
44MAINSTREAM INTERPRETATION OF RACISM (2)
Racism is basically an expression of peoples
ignorance an egregious example of what happens
when they have the wrong ideas about social
reality. To cure it we need to educate the
ignorant, so that they understand that people of
color are no different in any essential respect
from the white majority. Once this truth is
absorbed, then Americans of all colors can stop
hating and start cooperating. In the meantime,
the government needs to pass appropriate laws
banning discrimination. Social workers can do
their part by promoting diversity and doing more
to recruit people of color into the profession
45SOUND FAMILIAR?
- IF MAINSTREAM VIEWS, AS PRESENTED THUS FAR, SOUND
FAMILIAR, THATS BECAUSE THEY ARE INDEED - MAINSTREAM!
- THAT IS, MOST AMERICANS MOST OF THE TIME THINK IN
MAINSTREAM WAYS---SO MUCH SO THAT IT NEVER OCCURS
TO MOST OF THEM THAT THERE ARE INDEED OTHER WAYS
OF UNDERSTANDING REALITY.
46RADICALISM (1)
-
-
- ALTHOUGH OFTEN SUBTLE AND COMPLEX, THE RADICAL
VIEW OF REALITY WAS ESSENTIALLY SUMMARIZED BY
KARL MARX, ITS LEADING EXPONENT, AS FOLLOWS
47THE RADICAL VIEW OF REALITY (2)
THE IDEAS OF THE RULING CLASS ARE IN EVERY
EPOCH THE RULING IDEAS, I.E., THE CLASS WHICH IS
THE RULING MATERIAL FORCE IN SOCIETY IS AT THE
SAME TIME ITS RULING INTELLECTUAL FORCE. THE
CLASS WHICH HAS AT ITS DISPOSAL THE MATERIAL
MEANS OF PRODUCTION, HAS CONTROL AT THE SAME
TIME OVER THE MEANS OF MENTAL PRODUCTION, SO
THAT THEREBY, GENERALLY SPEAKING, THOSE WHO LACK
THE MEANS OF MENTAL PRODUCTION ARE SUBJECT TO
IT. KARL MARX, THE GERMAN
IDEOLOGY
48RADICALISM (3)
- TRANSLATED AT A RELATIVELY CRUDE LEVEL, MARX WAS
SAYING SOMETHING SIMILAR TO THE OBSERVATION
ATTRIBUTED TO, A.J. LIEBLING, AN OLD-STYLE NEW
YORK NEWSPAPERMAN - FREEDOM OF THE PRESS BELONGS TO THOSE WHO OWN
ONE -
49SO WHO DOES OWN THE MEDIA, ANYWAY?
- A POPULAR GOVERNMENT WITHOUT POPULAR
INFORMATION, OR THE MEANS OF ACQUIRING IT, IS BUT
A PROLOGUE TO A FARCE OR A TRAGEDY, OR PERHAPS
BOTH. - JAMES MADISON (1822)
- READ ALL ABOUT IT!
- U.S. BOOK PUBLISHING IS NOW DOMINATED BY 7 FIRMS
- U.S. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHING IS NOW DOMINATED BY 6
FIRMS - U.S. CABLE TELEVISION IS NOW DOMINATED BY 6 FIRMS
- IN 1900 THE U.S. SOCIALIST PARTY HAD TWO MILLION
MEMBERS AND PUBLISHED 325 NEWSPAPERS AND
MAGAZINE IN 2000 THERE IS NO SOCIALIST PARTY AND
ONLY A HANDFUL OF RADICAL PUBLICATIONS - IN 1989 THE LARGEST SITDOWN STRIKE IN 30 YEARS
(IN PITTSON, VA.) WAS VIRTUALLY UNREPORTED
50A WORD FROM AN EXPERT
-
- To a large extent, the absence of
informedpolitics reflects the power of U.S.
media corporations to control and
dominatepolitical debate. The corporate media
may well be the most powerful adversary in the
ranks of capital. They control what the general
public sees and reads about the political process
in the United States. Critical discussion of
media structure is the last thing they want the
general public to consider. - Robert W. McChesney
- Leading media analyst
51RADICALS (4)
- In other words, radicals believe that the
creation, selection, and reception of ideas is by
no means a neutral process, but rather reflects
the outlook of the political and economic elite,
whose ownership and/or control of the means of
mental production---not only the media but the
schools at all levels, as well as related
institutions like advertising---assure that their
views are likely to be accepted by the average
person. - Thus, rather than incorporating universal
meanings, as mainstreamers believe, ideas such as
democracy, freedom, and equalityreflect
and reinforce the specific class relations of
capitalist society e.g., we only are taught and
therefore only understand democracy as it
exists under capitalist conditions, which is in
turn only one---and, from the Marxian
perspective, one distinctly limited---form of
democracy. - Alternative understandings of democracy and
other basic concepts are, as a practical matter,
simply not provided with much exposure.
52RADICALISM (5)
- It is very important to understand, however, that
bourgeois ideology, whether in its liberal or
conservative form, is NOT part of some crude
capitalist conspiracy. Although ideas
threatening to the status quo are generally
excluded from the mass media and school system,
the rich do not secretly get together to put one
over on the rest of us---such a notion is a
childish oversimplification of how capitalism
really works. - Instead, most people understand that certain
ideas are acceptable while others are not. Even
when familiar with the latter (which is often not
the case), people who make their living
communicating ideas are alert to the need to
censor themselves lest expressions of
unorthodoxy result in punishments, such as
firing or, in the case of academics, denial of
tenure. Power in democratic capitalist
societies is thus generally wielded in a subtle,
indirect way. Instead of squelching dangerous
ideas outright, the powerful depend on their
underlings to be smart enough not to raise
awkward issues in the first place. Subversive
ideas are thereby excluded from everyday
discourse, so that, as a practical matter, they
might as well not exist at all! The result is
that most people most of the time just assume
that the way they live is the way they must live
there are no alternatives worth bothering about,
especially since daily pressures generally
preclude consideration of such possibilities. It
is only when the economy goes into crisis that
people may begin to consider alternatives.
53MAINSTREAMISM AND RADICALISM A COMPARISON
- MAINSTREAMISM
- Ideas like democracy and freedom are
universals. - Ideas are accepted or rejected on the basis of
reason. - Conservatism and liberalism constitute the entire
range of sensible and acceptable social and
political discourse anything outside these ways
of thinking is unacceptable because it is neither
intellectually sensible nor politically
practicable.
- RADICALISM
- The meaning of such ideas is dependent on
specific political and historical circumstances. - Mass acceptance or rejection depends more on
power than on reason. Indeed, a group or class
has power to the extent that ideas reflecting its
outlook interests (e.g., about what constitutes
democracy) are widely accepted. - Although pervasive in the U.S., conservatism
liberalism are merely two sides of the same
capitalist (bourgeois) coin. There are more
insightful ways of understanding social reality.
54AN RADICAL VIEW OF SOCIAL WORK
- SOCIAL WORK IS ABOUT
- HELPING TO ASSURE POLITICAL NORMALCY BY
- FACILITATING THE INDIVIDUAL TO ADJUST TO
RATHER THAN QUESTION AN UNJUST STATUS QUO. - 2. ACTING AS THE COERCIVE AGENTS OF AN
INEQUITABLE SYSTEM WHICH CREATES THE VERY
PROBLEMS---NOTABLY, POVERTY, RACISM, CRIME,
ADDICTION, ETC.---THAT SOCIAL WORKERS OSTENSIBLY
SEEK TO COMBAT. IT FOLLOWS THAT SOCIAL WORKERS
MUST ATTEND TO THE DISEASE ITSELF RATHER THAN
MERELY TO ITS SYMPTONS. - 3. SUPPORTING PASSAGE OF SOCIAL WELFARE POLICIES
THAT DO LITTLE OR NOTHING TO ADDRESS THE
UNDERLYING STRUCTURAL PROBLEM---NAMELY, THE
OVERWHELMING CAPITALIST ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL
POWER.
55A RADICAL DEPICTION OF INDIVIDUALISM
RADICALS CONTEND THAT IN OUR SOCIETY
BOTH PEOPLE AND INSTITUTIONS, ARE SHAPED TO
REFLECT THE ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL INTERESTS OF
SOCIETYS RICHEST AND MOST POWERFUL
ELEMENTS--- FUNDAMENTALLY, THE CAPITALIST CLASS,
WHICH OWNS AND CONTROLS MOST OF THE WEALTH
CREATED BY SOCIETY AS A WHOLE. THE FOLLOWING
TWO SLIDES EXPLAIN RADICAL THINKING IN MORE
DETAIL
56A RADICAL DEPICTION OF INDIVIDUALISM
Under capitalism, people beliefs about the good
life reflects the values of the capitalist
class, which controls institutional life through
its ownership of the means of production.The
result is that all institutions function in
accordance w/capitalist economic and political
priorities. What Americans call individualism
is thus merely the necessary adaptations we must
make to the conditions of life under capitalism.
These are celebrated by the capitalist media as
invigoratingly competitive and joyfully
consumerist, and are promoted in the schools
as self-reliant individualism. In reality,
however, we have no choice but to accommodate to
the institutional life of this society, since
this is the only way we are able to survive. The
next slide takes a closer look at this process.
57A RADICAL DEPICTION OF INDIVIDUALISM
Our institutional life is controlled by those who
own and control the productive wealth
(capital) of society. Ultimately, all ideas,
values, and---yes, social welfare
programs--- reflect capitalist interests and
priorities, which are essentially the 1)
maintenance of social order and (2) nurturing
conditions favorable to profit making (a
friendly business climate). It is, for example,
in the interest of the corporations---owned for
the most part by the very rich---see module 4 for
details) to keep labor costs down by
encouraging a massive influx of cheap labor into
the market, thereby depressing wages and keeping
inflation under control. There are other ways to
accomplish the same goal ---for example, a tax on
luxury consumption---but these are opposed by the
rich as threaten- ing to their wealth and
political power. From the radical viewpoint,then,
EVERY SOCIAL POLICY ISSUE FACING AMERICAN
SOCIETY, AND EVERY MAINSTREAM SOLUTION TO THOSE
ISSUES, IN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER REFLECT
THESE REALITIES, EVEN THO MOST OF US
DONTREALIZE THIS TO BE THE CASE. Racism
constitutes a good illustration in this regard.
58A RADICAL INTERPRETATION OF RACISM
Black people have been ruthlessly exploited ever
since they were brought here as slaves.
Fundamentally, the situation of the black masses
has yet to change. True, many blacks have been
incorporated into the middle class (the black
bourgeoisie), But most are still at the end of
the line when it comes to job opportunities. (La
st hired, first fired.) Thus, radicals calls
attention to the role welfare recipients play in
the economy they are tossed into the labor
market when times are good, so as to dampen
wages, and tossed out when there arent enough
jobs to go around. In short, capitalism breeds
racism, whatever the prevailing ideas may
contend. (For more on racism, see module 4.)
59RACIAL PREJUDICE ANOTHER LOOK
- RADICAL VIEW
- YES, IGNORANCE IS OF COURSE REFLECTED IN RACIAL
ATTITUDES, BUT SO IS ECONOMICS! - FOR EXAMPLE, WHITE RACISM ULTIMATELY DERIVES FROM
FEARS THAT BLACKS THREATEN JOBS AND REAL ESTATE
VALUES, AS WELL AS THE SOCIAL STATUS OF
LOWER-MIDDLE CLASS WHITES, WHO WANT TO BELIEVE
THEY ARE SUPERIOR TO BLACKS. IT DIVIDES PEOPLE
FROM ONE ANOTHER, AND THEREFORE HELPS TO SUSTAIN
THE STATUS QUO. - IT FOLLOWS THAT RACIAL PREJUDICE WILL NOT
DISAPPEAR UNTIL AND UNLESS THERE ARE ENOUGH
DECENT JOBS FOR EVERYONE OTHERWISE COMPETITION
FOR THESE POSITIONS WILL CONTINUE TO GENERATE
FEAR AND SUSPICION.
- MAINSTREAM VIEW
- RACISM RESULTS FROM IGNORNANCE PEOPLE WOULD
CEASE TO BE RACISTS IF THEY WERE PROPERLY
EDUCATED IN THE MEANING OF BROTHERHOOD AND HAD A
SCIENTIFIC UNDERSTANDING OF GENETICS AND HUMAN
EVOLUTION. - IN ADDITION TO ITS OTHER BENEFITS, RACIAL
INTEGRATION GIVES PEOPLE THE CHANCE TO KNOW ONE
ANOTHER ON A PERSONAL BASIS THEIR IDEAS ABOUT
RACE WILL CHANGE ONCE THEY INTERACT OVER AN
EXTENDED PERIOD.
60STILL NOT SURE WHETHER YOU ARE A MAINSTREAMER OR
A RADICAL?
HERES SOME ADDITIONAL DETAILED STUFF TO HELP
YOU DECIDE!
61MAINSTREAMISM VS. RADICALISM FURTHER COMMENTS
- THE PRECEDING EXAMPLES IS JUST THAT EXAMPLES OF
HOW THE MAINSTREAM-RADICAL DISTINCTION CAN BE
APPLIED TO VIRTUALLY ALL SOCIAL ISSUES. BECAUSE
AMERICANS ARE SO ACCUSTOMED TO THINKING IN
IDEALIST TERMS, IT RARELY OCCURS TO THEM THAT
THERE IS ANOTHER (I.E., MATERIALIST) WAY OF
UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL REALITY. YET IF THIS CLASS
HAS ONE OVERRIDING LESSON, IT IS THE IMPORTANCE
OF ACQUIRING SUCH UNDERSTANDING FOR REASONS
PROVIDED IN EARLIER SLIDES. - NOTE, HOWEVER, THAT WHILE MAINSTREAM-RADICAL
PARADIGMS ARE CONCEPTUALLY DISTINCT, THEY ARE, AS
A PRACTICAL MATTER, INTERRELATED IN COMPLEX WAYS.
THUS, ALL PEOPLE BELIEVE THEIR IDEAS ABOUT SOCIAL
REALITY TO BE TRUE, BUT MOST RARELY REFLECT ON
THE DEEPER ORIGINS OF THOSE IDEAS---THAT IS, WHY
THEY BELIEVE AS THEY DO. - IN SHORT, UNDERSTANDING SOCIAL POLICY/SOCIAL
REALITY REQUIRES A SUBTLE INTELLIGENCE CAPABLE OF
GRASPING THE INTERRELATION OF IDEAS AND POWER.
ACQUIRING SUCH UNDERSTANDING REQUIRES AN ALERT
MIND INTERESTED IN HISTORY, SOCIAL SCIENCE, AND
PUBLIC AFFAIRS.
62DO YOU FIT THE BILL?
63MAINSTREAMISM VS. RADICALISM A NOTE FOR SOCIAL
WORKERS
- SOCIAL WORK STUDENTS CAN PERHAPS BETTER GRASP
THESE DISTINCTIONS IF THEY THINK OF THEM IN
PSYCHO-SOCIAL TERMS FAMILIAR TO THOSE WITH
THERAPEUTIC TRAINING. - THUS, THE OBJECT OF THERAPY IS TO HELP CLIENTS
UNDERSTAND THAT THEIR IDEAS ABOUT THEMSELVES
(THEIR SELF IMAGES) DERIVE FROM THEIR FORMATIVE
EXPERIENCES. IN OTHER WORDS, SELF-IMAGES HAVE
CAUSES, AND THOSE CAUSES ULTIMATELY ARE ROOTED IN
THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF ONES UPBRINGING AND EARLY
RELATIONSHIPS. - IN THE SAME WAY, OUR SOCIAL UNDERSTANDINGS (E.G.,
WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN AMERICAN, A SUCCESS, OR A
MORALLY RESPONSIBLE PERSON) REFLECT THE SOCIAL
CIRCUMSTANCES OF OUR UPBRINGING THE SOCIAL
VALUES INCULCATED BY THE FAMILY, MASS MEDIA,
SCHOOLS, AND WHAT THE SOCIOLOGISTS CALL OTHER
SOCIALIZING INSTITUTIONS. THE RESULT IS THAT WE
RARELY REFLECT ON THE ECONOMIC INTERESTS SERVED
BY THESE IDEAS OR HOW THESE IDEAS HELP TO
BUTTRESS A HIGHLY INEGALITARIAN STATUS QUO. YET
TO BE EFFECTIVE POLICY ADVOCATES FOR OUR CLIENTS,
WE MUST ACQUIRE SUCH UNDERSTANDING---THAT IS, WE
MUST LEARN TO THINK IN BOTH MAINSTREAM AND
RADICAL FRAMES OF REFERENCE.
64A THOUGHTFUL EXERCISE
Use your new knowledge of mainstreamism and
radicalism, to review some social policy or
social welfare policy issue of interest to
you. which viewpoint appears to provide
the stronger case?