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Dahmen, Stephan: Regulating Transitions from School to Work. An Institutional Ethnography of Activation Work in Action. 2021
Inhalt
Contents
1. Introduction
2. Youth, Education and the Welfare State
2.1 How Institutions Structure the Youth Phase
2.1.1. Regimes of Youth Transitions
2.1.2. Welfare State Typologies, Educational Systems, and Transitions from School to Work
2.1.3. The Comparative Political Economy of Skill Formation
2.2. Situating the Swiss Transition Regime
2.2.1. Virtues and Vices of Apprenticeship-Systems
2.2.2. Mechanisms that Lead to Inequalities
2.3. The Politics of VET in Switzerland and the Emergenceof Transition Measures
2.3.1. The Apprenticeship-Crisis and the Rise of Youth Unemployment in the Early Nineties
2.3.2. Reforms in the Unemployment Insurance for Young People
2.3.3. The new VET-Act and the Popular Initiative on the Rightto Vocational Training
2.4. Excursus: Collectivist Skill Formation Systems and the Right to Education
2.4.1. The Emergence of Transition Management and the Birth of Transition Policies
2.4.2. Individual Counseling and the Early Identification of Risk-Groups
2.4.3. Standardizing the “Matching” Process
2.4.4. Transition Measures and the Promotion of a “Fast” Transition from School to Work
2.4.5. Interinstitutional Collaboration and the Rise of Educationfare
2.5. From the Emergence of a Problem Towards the Construction of a Policy
2.5.1. Contradictions of the Swiss Transition Regime
2.5.2. Discursive Shifts: from Youth Unemployment to “Youth at Risk”
3. Life-Course, Biography and Social Policy
3.1. The Life-Course as an Institutional Program and a Subjective Construction
3.1.1. Life‐course, Biography and Institutionalized Individualism
3.1.2. From Positions and Sequences to Identities over Time
3.1.3. Rationalization, Normalization and Social Control of the Life-Course: temporal Patterns and the “Autonomous” Individual
3.1.4. The Paradoxes of Individualization and the Politics of the Individual
3.2. The Organizational Regulation of Biographies
3.2.1. Human Service Organizations as Life-Course “Gate-Keepers”
3.2.2. People Processing and People Changing Institutions
3.2.3. Human Service Organizations as Discursive Environments for Self-Construction
3.2.4. Human Service Organizations as Subjectivation Devices
3.2.5. Towards an Analysis of Subjectivation Processes in Human Service Organizations
4. Analyzing Activation in Action
4.1. Street‐level Bureaucrats, Institutionalized Organizations and People Processing Organizations
4.1.1. Overcoming the Implementation-Control-Discretion-Narrative
4.1.2. From Street‐level Bureaucrats to Human Service Organizations
4.1.3. Human Service Organizations and their Institutionalized Environments
4.1.4. (De-)coupling and Organizational Fields
4.1.5. From Organizational Fields to Contradictory Institutional Logics
4.1.6. From Institutional Logics to Competing Orders of Worth:The Sociology of Conventions
4.1.7. Organizations as Devices for Complex Coordination: Conflicts and Compromises in Human Service Organizations
4.1.8. Human Service Work in the Light of the Sociology of Conventions
4.1.9. Conclusion: Applying Convention Theory for the Analysis of Human Service Work
5. Methodology, Research Design and Data Collection
5.1. A Focus on Activation Practices
5.1.1. Research design and data collection
5.1.2. Interviews, “Everyday Work Stories” and Participant Observation
5.1.3. Analysis of Documents and Texts
5.1.4. Data Analysis Strategies
6. Results
6.1. A Short Introduction to Motivational Semesters
6.1.1. Motivational Semesters as Complex Devices of Coordination
6.1.2. Contradictory Logics and their Practical Compromises
6.2. Conflicts Between Orders of Worth and situated Compromises in Human Service Work: The Case of Sanctions
6.2.1. The Institutional Script of the Sanctioning Procedure
6.2.2. From Rules to their Implements:The Local Interpretation of Sanctioning Rules
6.2.3. The Grey Sphere of Acting “Below the Conventions”
6.3. Gate‐keeping and the Negotiation of Employability: The Intermediary Function of Motivational Semesters
6.3.1. Exclusion Through Sorting Out
6.3.2. Flexibilising Job Aspirations
6.3.3. Dealing with Disappointed Expectations and the (Re-)Construction of Viable Job Aspirations
6.3.4. “Selling” Young Persons to Employers: A Process of Valuation and Mediation
6.4. Constructing the Client that Can Create Himself:Technologies of Agency and the Production of a Will
6.4.1. Constructing Viable Job Choices Through Guided Self-Exploration
6.4.2. Negotiating the Integration Contract
6.4.3. Private Problems Becoming Public Issues
6.4.4. Modulating Distance to Accommodate for the Pitfalls of the Contract
6.4.5. Subjectivation Practices: Valuation and the Preparation to the Conventional Demands of the Labor-Market
6.5. “Making Up” Viable Future Selves Through Evaluation –Working with the Portfolio-Tool
6.5.1. Elements of the Portfolio
6.5.2. Linking the administrative‐temporal order of the Motivational Semester with practices of Self-Exploration
6.5.3. Individual Self-Exploration and the Invocation of Individuality
6.5.4. Self-Assessments as Tools for Self-Discovery
6.5.5. Panoptical Evaluation and Self-Improvement
6.5.6. Biographical Self-Scrutiny and the Continual Limitation of the Space of Possibilities
6.5.7. Linking the Biographical to the Structural: Learning to Describe Oneself in the Evaluative Vocabulary of the Labor-Market
6.6. Guided Self-Exploration as a “Narrative Machinery” that Produces Intelligible Subjects
6.6.1. Activating a Biographical “Care” for the Self
7. General Conclusion and Discussion of Main Results
7.1. Organizations as the “Missing Link” for the Mediation Between Systemic Requirements and Subjectivity
7.2. The institutional Production of Subjectivity:Biographisation – Valuation – Optimisation – Autonomisation
7.2.1. Biographisation
7.2.2. (E-)valuation and Mediation
7.2.3. Optimisation
7.2.4. Discretion and Invisible Work as a Precarious Precondition for Successful Coordination
7.2.5. Risks and Limits of Institutionalised Individualism: “Autonomy Gaps” in Welfare Polices
7.2.6. Subjectivation Practices Between Subjection and Enablement
8. Bibliography
9. Annex
Acronyms and Abbreviations
List of Figures and Tables