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Between surveillance and subjectification: professionals and the governance of quality and patient safety in English hospitals

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journal contribution
posted on 2015-08-25, 08:28 authored by Graham P. Martin, Myles Leslie, Joel Minion, Janet Willars, Mary Dixon-Woods
Two understandings of the dynamics of power developed by Foucault have been extensively used in analyses of contemporary healthcare: disciplinary power and governmentality. They are sometimes considered alternative or even contradictory conceptual frameworks. Here, we seek to deploy them as complementary ways of making sense of the complexities of healthcare organisation today. We focus on efforts to improve quality and safety in three UK hospitals. We find a prominent role for disciplinary power, including a panoptic gaze that is to some extent internalised by professionals. We suggest, however, that the role of disciplinary power relies for its impact on complementary strategies that are more akin to governmentality. These strategies foster organisational contexts that are receptive to disciplinary work. More fundamentally, we find that both disciplinary power and governmentality work on subjectivities in rather a different manner from that suggested by conventional accounts. We offer an alternative, less individualised and more socialised, understanding of the way in which power acts upon subjectivity and behaviour in professional contexts.

History

Citation

Social Science & Medicine, 2013, 99, pp. 80-88

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Social Science & Medicine

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

0277-9536

Copyright date

2013

Available date

2015-10-30

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277953613005662#

Language

en