Browsing by Author "Sunnerfjell, Jon"
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Item Governing the Un-Employable: Exploring the Biopolitical Technology of Coding Disability at the Swedish Public Employment Service(2016-08-25) Sunnerfjell, Jon; University of Gothenburg / Department of Sociology and Work Science; Göteborgs universitet / Institutionen för sociologi och arbetsvetenskapThe article explores the client perspective of receiving disability codes at the Swedish Public Employment Service. Interviews with individuals who for various reasons and on different initiatives have accepted disability codes at the PES have been analyzed by guidance of the governmentality perspective and the literature on medicalization processes. Findings suggest that there are various organizational interests in the codes. The study also indicates that present labor market measures entail processes of subjectification in the name of ‘employability’ as a normative discourse. Moreover, the article suggests that clients with neuropsychiatric diagnoses distinguish between their diagnoses and the disability codes they have received from the PES. This seems to be in line with an ongoing re-negotiation of ‘disability’ within the neurobiological discourse related to the so called ‘attention disorders’. As a result, the article shows how conflicts may be spurred between clients and caseworkers at the PES when diagnoses, such as ADHD, are to be processed into disability codes.Item Un-learning to labour? Activating the unemployed in a former industrial community(2023-02-20) Sunnerfjell, JonIn the aftermath of automation and globalisation of production, the Western welfare states have come to leave industrial society behind in favour of an increasingly competitive and service-oriented economy. Nevertheless, there are many environments whose inhabitants still identify with the culture that developed in typical industrial communities. In addition to high unemployment rates, these environments are often burdened by a situated lack of study tradition whereby unemployed people still aspire to occupy manual labour despite a lack of such jobs. This thesis examines the attempts to break with the reproduction of a manual working-class culture in a former industrial community in Sweden. Using ethnographic methods, it explores how so-called activation policy intending to reduce public expenditures on economic benefits in favour of fostering responsible and employable individuals, is translated locally given the community’s situated rationality. With theoretical inspiration from the governmentality perspective, literature on social class, as well as Boltanski and Thévenot’s economic-sociological pragmatism, the analysis shows how the municipality’s translation of activation policy tended to incorporate rather than transform a manual working-class culture in the activation of unemployed. The thesis argues that this hindered the market imperatives and logic of self-realisation pervading activation policy to take root in the activation schemes. Furthermore, the thesis points to how concepts such as inclusion and exclusion, which are central to the active society orientation, appeared ambiguous in light of unemployed who already nurtured a sense of belonging and social attachment. By deepening our understanding of situated rationalities and how they may compete with the logic imbuing supranational policy recommendations on activation and active inclusion, these are conclusions of interest to both policy makers and actors involved in the activation of unemployed locally.