Empowerment as Ceremony

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A01=William Epstein
American Complacency
American Social Welfare Policy
American Stratification
anthropological analysis
Author_William Epstein
Category=JHB
civic religion sociology
Community Development Corporations
Contemporary Empowerment
critical social theory
critique of empowerment practice
Democratic Populism
Empowerment Practice
Empowerment Research
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
Freire's Conscientization
Freire’s Conscientization
Greater Socioeconomic Equality
Heroic Overcoming
Household Net Wealth
marginalization studies
Policy Romanticism
practice
prescriptive cultural norms
Public Administration
Reactionary Tribalism
Sleep Learning
social welfare policy
Soft Bigotries
Terrible Iniquities
Traditional Healing Ceremonies
Traditional Mental Health Treatment
Usual Improvements
William M. Epstein

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138509542
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Many people in the United States are poor, lead marginal lives, and need jobs as well as basic services such as education, medical care, and housing. Multitudes in other parts of the world, in addition to being poor, are jailed, tortured, and killed for being members of the wrong ethnic group or expressing political opinions. Those who argue for empowerment claim it is a magic bullet. It can liberate the oppressed, largely through self-organization, self-motivation, self-invention, and even self-clarity.

William M. Epstein sees contemporary empowerment practice in the United States as a civic church of national values, one better in performing its ceremonial role than god-based houses of worship. By itself, empowerment is not worth the effort of commentary, since it achieves none of its goals and has not even generated a respectable critical literature. But Epstein argues that empowerment practice and American social welfare both embody prescriptive cultural preferences. Like art and music, empowerment opens windows into deeper social meaning.

The social sciences have carved out roles for themselves by looking for simple remedies, ones that are inexpensive and compatible with contemporary social arrangements. Epstein shows that those in social work practices have not only deluded themselves into thinking that these services have real instrumental value, but really operate at cross-purposes. This accessible work will attract critical attention among these professional groups. It bases its carefully-documented insights upon informed sociological and anthropological theory.

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