Harnessing the Social: State, Crisis and (Big) Society

E. Dowling, D. Harvie

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

The article analyses the UK government’s plans to create a social investment market. The Big Society as political economy is understood as a response to three aspects of a multi-faceted, global crisis: a crisis of capital accumulation; a crisis of social reproduction; and, a fiscal crisis of the state. While the neoliberal state is retreating from the sphere of social reproduction, further off-loading the costs of social reproduction onto the unwaged realms of the home and the community, it is simultaneously engaging in efforts to enable this terrain of social reproduction to be harnessed for profit. Key to this process are specific government policies, the creation of new financial institutions and instruments and the introduction of the metric of ‘social value’. Policies ostensibly aimed at resolving the crisis in ways that empower local communities actually foster further financialisation and a deepening of capitalist disciplinary logics into the social fabric.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)869-886
Number of pages18
JournalSociology
Volume48
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2014
Externally publishedYes

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 504023 Political sociology

Keywords

  • Big Society
  • crisis
  • financialisation
  • social impact
  • social impact bonds
  • social investment
  • social reproduction
  • social value

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