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Browsing by Author "Pettersson, Jane"

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    Förklara skulden – Sanera skammen - En analys av överskuldsattas berättelser
    (2013-01-14) Pettersson, Jane; University of Gothenburg / Department of Sociology and Work Science; Göteborgs universitet / Institutionen för sociologi och arbetsvetenskap
    Being in-debt is considered “normal” in a sense since we are in many ways required to become in-debt in order to provide a place to live, appliances and furniture or to get an education. Many of these necessities we pay for in retrospect. The economic system is organized around consumption both when we have and do not have money to cover the expenses. Being too much in-debt though, is not considered “normal”. Overindebtedness not only entails serious debt problems, people in this situation also experience that others perceive them as morally lacking consequently leading to feelings of shame. Through qualitative interviews with insolvents this report aims to provide a greater understanding for people living greatly in debt. The social and emotional realm of their situation is the focus of this research and the way they narrate their story of indebtedness to make sense of their situation. The purpose of this report is to answer the following questions: How do insolvents describe, explain and give meaning to their situation?; What forms of shame do these insolvents express and what role does shame play in how they relate to their situation?; What significance do meetings with authorities and the decision to undergo Debt Reconstruction have for their self-image and the way they deal with experiences of shame? The interviewees explain their overindebtedness as being a result of outer causes they could not foresee and therefore beyond their control not as a consequence of financial carelessness. Still, they experience different types of shame and shaming from others depending on the social relations in which shame is given and taken. Meeting authorities can either be a situation where one is shamed or one where claims of sympathy are being met. In the narratives the need for sympathy is expressed, being met with sympathy reduces the feelings of shame repairing their self-image and heals social bonds.
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    Governing citizens in the age of financialization: A study of Swedish financial education
    (2021-12-06) Pettersson, Jane
    In contemporary Western capitalist societies, the state has increasingly withdrawn from its role as welfare provider, while financial institutions, actors, products, and narratives play an increasingly important part not only in global and national economies, but also in everyday life and thus for societies as a whole. This development is described by scholars as financialization and the financialization of everyday life. Contributing to this scholarly field, this dissertation examines Swedish financial education and the case of the Gilla din ekonomi (Like your personal finance) financial education network and its attempt to create financial subjects who embrace this development and its rationale. The overall aim of this dissertation is to describe and understand the different levels of problematization and practices of financial education, on a policy implementation level, by the study of educational practices, and through the study of how financial education occurs in the everyday lives of the people such initiatives are intended to govern. I do this by investigating financial education from several angles. First, I situate financial education and the problematization of Swedish consumers in the local context of time and place, i.e., in relation to contemporary and historical political discourse and practice. Second, I investigate the translation from policy to practice, showing how consumers are problematized by categorization, and by examining what role emotions play in fostering responsible and rational financial subjects. Through the theoretical lens of governmentality and sociology of emotions, I thus explore how the practices of financial education rely on emotions as a governing technique. Finally, I explore the subjects’ reactions to such governing attempts and their different problematizations, and strategies of resistance in encounters with financial education. In this way, this thesis contributes to and builds on previous research that understands financial education as governmentality in the age of financialization, i.e., the three aspects considered above constitute different methods of influencing the conduct of subjects—by conveying certain ideas, norms, and emotions—to align with and counter conduct, prevailing discourses of what constitutes “good” financial behavior. In summary, I argue that Swedish state-led financial education is a case of financialization of everyday life. Governing citizens’ financial knowledge and behavior has been a political issue since financialization took off in the 1980s. The results of the three studies in this dissertation show that the purpose of financial education is to guide and educate citizens into active, responsible financial subjects. Financial education does this by teaching course participants how to both think and emotionally relate to financial markets and products. Course attendees are taught to take care of, and take responsibility for, their financial well-being through activities such as planning for their future retirement and saving money by investing, while avoiding “bad” financial products and thus avoiding over-indebtedness. Nevertheless, the analysis showed that course attendees (re)acted by problematization, and conducted themselves counter to the encouragement to become financially savvy as they related the teachings to other life concerns that were inconsistent with the financial subjectivity they were encouraged to perform.

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