Literature DB >> 18298628

Wellbeing and empowerment: the importance of recognition.

Pamela Fisher1.   

Abstract

Health and wellbeing are now located within a policy framework that emphasises the empowerment of the individual 'consumer'. Within this paradigm, empowerment is writ large and wellbeing is seen as a 'civic duty'. The role of the health and social care services has been identified as one of enabling service users to promote their own wellbeing. In this paper, it is argued that dominant narratives relating to 'achievement' and 'normality' may result in forms of 'misrecognition' that act to undermine the positive sense of self that is crucial for self-empowerment. It is suggested that while the parents of disabled babies often act reflexively to create empowering life narratives within the private sphere, this is not always facilitated by their encounters with health and social care organisations where neo-liberal ideas and biomedical narratives, based on a modernist view of identity as individual and existing prior to society, mean that parents and children are attributed 'deficient' identities in ways that undermine empowerment. With reference to 'the politics of recognition', it is argued that services that seek to empower must value diversity and alterity whilst respecting human dependency on intersubjective recognition.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18298628     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2007.01074.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  5 in total

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3.  Beyond Components of Wellbeing: The Effects of Relational and Situated Assemblage.

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4.  Stable and destabilised states of subjective well-being: dance and movement as catalysts of transition.

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5.  Arts and health as a practice of liminality: managing the spaces of transformation for social and emotional wellbeing with primary school children.

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Journal:  Health Place       Date:  2012-07-06       Impact factor: 4.078

  5 in total

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