Stop text copy

Tell the other side of the story

Theoretical Reflections - Workers

   The frontline of service delivery is the turf on which the struggles between the interests of individuals and authorities are played out.  Whether by intent or not (see for example Barnes and Prior (Prior 2009)) individuals and workers influence outcomes in the ways they interpret and apply policies and rules in practice. 
Workers in employment services face significant conflicts and strains borne from the dual role of delivery of both help and hassle.  Lack of trust is an issue that has been identified elsewhere, as the relationship between job seekers and workers has shifted from one of helping to hassling (McDonald and Marston 2005Marston and McDonald 2008), backed by threats to financial security which is already a significant cause of concern for welfare recipients.
Using Bourdiesian concepts this chapter further explores the theme of the role of inter-subjective recognition and its role in the validation of capital in employment service exchanges between workers and clients. By exploring the dynamics of the ways in which capital is recognised and legitimated in inter-subjective exchanges this study adds depth to understanding the properties of street level exchanges.
The first section explores the ways in which capital is employed and constrained for workers in their street level exchanges with job seekers. “Capital” denotes the resources individuals possess and its relational value on the fields of welfare exchanges.  The value of the capital is obtained from Habitus and is articulated in hard forms like rules, or soft forms subjectively in the way in which it is recognised in inter-subjective exchanges.
The second section explores the importance of recognition and misrecognition of workers. Governmentalist conceptions of surveillance are highlighted here because of the way in which domination is achieved by governing through people by prescribing the right forms for their actions. The impact this has on individual workers is explored in some detail.
The final section explores the tensions between employment services and Centrelink to illustrate the way in which the contradictory values  and interests underpinning welfare to work policy result in intra-departmental system noise and conflict for the agents of delivery.

Understanding the concepts of capital in use

The section pauses to provide an explanation of the Bourdesian concepts of capital, field and Habitus and to illustrate their dynamic and relational qualities. The logic and theory of practice according to Bourdieu (Bourdieu 1977Bourdieu 1990Bourdieu and Wacquant 1992) are that capital, field and Habitus are dynamically interrelated and relational.
Effective action is only resourced using forms of capital that are valid in any given exchange, whether it be economic, social or cultural. Capital can only be effectively deployed if it holds currency within the field of its exchange according to dominant beliefs, ideologies or values inherited through exposure to Habitus.
The symbolic value of the forms of capital is upheld by the rules that govern the forms of social exchange, such as the law, the economy or other institutions which can assume a taken for granted nature. Roles and positions in the social field can be prescribed by the forms of capital agents possess, that is their symbolic distinctions, and assume varying degrees of power according to what is “valued”.  What is valued is provided with greatest symbolic power in the form of dominant interests.
Agents such as workers and service users occupy roles or positions within overlapping fields of social relations. Field boundaries are hard to define (Grenfell 2012) (Grenfell 2010)  therefore the “field” is not strictly bounded, meaning agents will bring resources and strategies they have learned from different parts of their socialisation in Habitus to these exhanges.
Imagine the service exchange of employment services as part of the broader “field” of social welfare. The field boundaries are unclear because they overlap across several dimensions of activity including possible relationships with Centrelink, housing, mental health and other services; their policies being defined across multiple government services agencies and with staff whose professional commitment and ethos vary according to the nature of the work and their attitude towards it.
Service users or clients perceive these networks of services differently. In some cases they separate them into distinctly different spheres, but in others they are the networks with which they are involved because of hardship or inheritance that have caused them to need the assistance of human service agencies.  In other words their relation to these fields is defined by their subjective apprehension of boundaries of the field and the role or identity (position) they occupy within it and this has been obtained through exposure to Habitus. 
All the players on the field occupy relative positions of interest which are intersubjectively produced and reproduced in welfare exchanges. One of the most critical elements that define outcomes is the way in which capital is legitimated intersubjectively and in which subjective attachment to symbolic positions and values occupied and held by the different players on the fields influence those outcomes.
It is useful to understand worker-client relations from this perspective because it enables us to see the multi-dimensionality of the exchanges, and perhaps to better understand what factors are at play in these encounters.  Importantly it enables us to diagnose the reasons why these exchanges do not play out in the ways policy makers imagine (and where certain assumptions about human behaviour and motivation are the basis of service model design).
Workers too perceive the boundaries of the field differently depending on their education and the degree to which they believe their work is part of a humanist project, or specific to a certain program (refs).  Boundary disputes are part of professionalisation of occupations shared by social workers, educationalist, psychologists and a range of human service workers.  These boundary disputes help to define practice and theory for these separate disciplines. Workers are driven by their own personal motives and attitudes towards others which also help to define their position in the field.
Ultimately, in practice, workers’ activity in the field will be (to some extent) constrained by organisational resources and the rules which define how they are used.  These rules are critical to determining how capital and resources are distributed and have far reaching implications for all the agents involved in welfare exchanges.  The rules reflect government’s intentions to create certain outcomes from the rules based on (often untested) perceptions and construals of the social problems they wish to ameliorate.
The relevance of this approach to the analysis of exchanges in welfare contexts such as employment services is that it draws into focus the complexity of policy implementation at the point of delivery. Barnes and Prior contend that it is by studying micro level of interactions between different individuals and groups in a variety of policy development and service delivery contexts we can understand what constitutes policy in practice (Barnes 2009)(p.198).
Also from the perspective of understanding policy implementation outcomes, Bevir (Bevir and Trentmann 2007) propose the idea of situated agency as a way of resolving the structuralist dispute about the ways in which individuals are able to influence outcomes in micro-level exchanges.  Bevir provides a fuller explanation of the distinction between the socially constructed and constituted idea of identity, and it’s relation to agency, suggesting agency is a form of power or discretion we all have to act in ways according to the ways we process information to undertake “local reasoning” (a view similar to philosopher Margaret Archer).
The negotiated outcomes of the interactions of citizens and officials, results in what Prior calls Prior counter-agency (Prior 2009).  This notion builds on the idea that although identity is formed through dialectical processes, it does not impede individuals from exercising forms choice or local level decisions that influence outcomes in social contexts. 
Therefore in the social realm discretionary local decision making and reasoning undertaken by individuals form counter-agency, in the ways in which the outcomes other than those officially mandated by policy makers are produced.
David Prior suggests there are three forms of resistance to public service policies and practices that can be expressed by public officials and citizens alike. The forms are “revision, resistance and refusal, and are useful categories for understanding the ways in which officials and citizens can negotiate new interpretations of policies, negotiate roles and identities and consciously or unconsciously resist or undermine government policy objectives. Prior 2009 in (Barnes 2009).
These points are important to the exploration of types of resistance being explored in this research because it underscores the fact that policy outcomes are co-constructed at the point of service delivery, not only through the influence of street level discretion (Lipsky 1980), but through the interactional behaviour of citizens and public servants.

Part 1 The importance of capital

In this research I have regularly encountered how service outcomes are dynamically constructed because of the way forms of capital hold value that are relative to the positions held by the agents in the exchange. The social relations of welfare exchanges are always dynamic because they are co-created in situ and hold temporally contingent (i.e. point in time) specific characteristics.
Rules are interpreted and mediated by workers who exercise interpretations that vary according to their position within the field of symbolic relations and their role as agents of the state obligated (at least in part) to uphold the rules.  At the least empowered extreme their” agency” they strictly adhere to rules and guidelines because they have to.  They employ the capital that inheres in the institutional forms they represent to uphold the rules and in which contemporary welfare to work in Australia are highly disciplinary. Institutional power involves the capacity to provide and withdraw the economic capital required to resource or support job seekers whether in the form of services or payments.
As worker capacity for autonomy grows, workers mediate system rules with interpretations based on their values; or they realise and articulate the symbolic values inherent in the exchange and impress new versions of the rules and advocate for improved versions of them. 
In these situations agents mobilise the forms of capital they possess according to their symbolic value in order to attempt to negotiate outcomes that better align with their interests. The effectiveness of their capacity to achieve better outcomes depends on the dynamic interactions that take place between themselves and workers who are also agents operating according to the rules which assign the relative value of the forms of capital available.

Classification struggles

A useful way of understanding what occurs in welfare service exchanges is based on the idea of classification struggles.  Goldberg notes how classification struggles often emerge as the result of changes in policy settings, in which they
provide a window of opportunity to define the status and rights of the policy’s clients relative to other clients in the field. Since the standing of clients is relational, already existing policies serve as important benchmarks in these classification struggles, providing models to be avoided or standards of treatment to which clients can aspire. Furthermore, policies and their elite patrons frequently stand in a competitive relationship, which may contribute to classification struggles as well.
Goldberg cites Bourdieu:
they are struggles to class claimants as citizens or paupers. At stake in classification struggles is ‘‘the power to make people see and believe, to get them to know and recognize, to impose the legitimate definition of the divisions of the social world and, thereby, to make nd unmake groups’’ (Bourdieu, 1991, p. 221). Cited in (Goldberg 2008) (p.88- 89)

 
Classification struggles in the welfare field are complicated because  “state officials, service providers, employers, clients, unions and social movements struggle to convert the resources they possess (economic, political, cultural or symbolic) into the kinds of capital they seek to accumulate (greater legitimacy, better services and benefits, lower taxes, influence over policy administration and so forth)” (Peillon 2001).  In policy administrator and development circles, classification struggles also provide battle grounds over expert opinion where individuals compete to obtain higher legitimacy for their views in battles for prestige (x in Grenfell 2012).
Classification struggles reflect the battles occurring in administrative back rooms where workers find themselves in conflict with one another and which are observed by service users when they are transferred between workers, an experience widely reported by participants in this research.
Crossley (Crossley 2003) explored the ways in which classification struggles are the source of crises which result in collectivisation of interests and the mobilisation of capital in pursuit of new political arrangements (or power arrangements).
In the analysis of the case studies of this research it is possible to identify the misalignment of interests between the dominant and the subordinate to be the location of ongoing conflict otherwise known as classification struggles. These battles take place in service contexts in which rules and attitudes (obtained from Habitus) are mediated through inter-subjective exchanges in which the relative symbolic positions of different interest  are represented by agents who themselves occupy positions relative to those interests.  The outcomes of service exchanges are therefore co-constructed during the exchanges in which these positions of interest are mobilised through the exercise of capital.
Re-classifications enacted through policy changes introduce new configurations of the way institutional capital is mobilised to achieve different ends. During the transition from one set of classifications to another conflict over the symbolic status of different welfare groups becomes highly visible as a form of rupture to the norm, like seismic fault lines.  Once the end change has been achieved the rupture may not be as evident to those who have not experienced the prior state although the memory of the re-classification persists for those who have.
The topic of conflict theory will be explored in more detail later. The following section focuses on the effects of classification struggles on workers.

Shifting classifications – the welfare field in Australia

The transition from the Job Network to the newly branded Job Services Australia (JSA) was a period during which workers experienced change to externally mandated requirements in the treatment of job seekers. Contrary to espoused policy intent, the analysis from workers who experienced this transition indicates a loss of flexibility in the treatments available to job seekers.  Worker caseloads increased exponentially, and a new focus on employment outcomes came to dominate practice for those with the most complex barriers to employment especially for clients who had previously been quarantined in the Personal Support Program.
The rules of welfare to work have also increasingly resulted in the re-classifications of welfare recipients into categories which government contracted employment agencies are required to “service”. Examples of these changes include changed eligibility for parenting payment recipients, increasingly tougher qualifications for Disability Support Pensioners, and heightened activity requirements for long term unemployed people.
Workers experienced the impact of the shift in classification of their clients in job seeking became a state of “neglect, deficit or deceit” (refs).  The label job seeker itself imposes immediate obligations on the welfare recipient, who within the system rules no longer fulfils a role of interest other than that.  The definition of job seeker is predicated on the assumption of work avoidance, and is underpinned by several decades of policy development intended to eradicate it.
These assumptions become the defining feature of the symbolic position of those classified as job seekers. For example, parents no longer have the right to put their caring first, as the obligation to meet activity tests becomes the primary focus of those who work with them.  The re-classification of parents signifies a symbolic shift in field position in employment services exchanges in which they come to be treated differently than before.
During this transition, workers experienced change in external conditions that imposed changes in the way their practice were tolerated and they were required to learn new skills such as reverse marketing, and chase job outcomes.
Change in externally mandated requirements affects workers in profound. It is not simply a matter of one day implementing a certain set of treatments for job seekers. Change requires adjustments in worker outlook or attitude, adjustments that do not always sit well with the individuals personal or professional beliefs. These changes created conflict for the worker, conflicts that are difficult for them to resolve and which have resulted in the exodus of the “professionalised” workforces from employment services.
The conflicts in the case of these workers centre around two key issues: the level of coercion that the system demands them to implement, and the level of commitment they feel to getting job seekers into “crap” and unsustainable jobs in order to maintain their employers’ performance ranking.  Workers were required to adopt disciplinary strategies, employing the institutional power derived from the dominance of governmental economic capital to obtain outcomes, in ways that conflicted with their view of what was really in the best interest of the job seekers they work with.
Professionalised workers with experience of prior conditions strongly resisted the mandate to punish job seekers with participation reports (PRs) and other forms of punitive activities such as job search clubs.  Their belief that these disciplinary tools are negative to real engagement is based both in their professional ethics, and through observations of the challenges this has created in worker-client relationships amongst their colleagues.  They had experienced clients who had long histories of PRs who presented angrily (etc etc) who were very difficult to bring back on side once they had received financial penalties.
Professionalised workers implement a range of strategies to avoid having to PR; they were “resourceful” in using their cultural capital (professional knowledge about what might be going on for their clients, and their clients probable reactions to PR-ing) to develop strategies to avoid having to PR their clients. 
Of course workers who entered the employment services workforce after the transition from JN to JSA did not experience the same level of conflict over the newly mandated treatments of job seekers even those with the most complex barriers. In contrast to workers such as Mel see PRs as part of a standard set of tools they have to use. Even Mel, an employment consultant who is relatively new to the sector, reports having no choice but to submit PRs even in circumstances she hopes the job seeker will get off. Although Mel plays strictly by the rules with Centrelink, there are times when she wants them to exercise discretion based on the notes she provides with her participation reports.
In Sarah’s case she records an increasing emphasis in her colleagues using PR’s to reconnect clients during the transition from JN to JSA.  The colleagues who are most likely to use PRs are those from the former JN with no professional background. The workers were sceptical about the extent to which their colleagues actually tried to contact job seekers who missed appointments. Jo notes how they would just let the phone ring twice and hang-up, as if the effort of contacting them was wasteful, when a PR would get them in. 
While professionalised workers see the hassle and help elements of the services they provide as diametrically opposed, others are obliged to make this work in their case management practice.  They therefore have less capital to resist what dominant requirements dictate they do.

Capital and reflexiveness

Professional workers have qualifications which align with the “interests” of their professions in the such fields as social work and psychology.  Workers with these qualifications display levels of cultural capital to be able to reflect on their experiences from an informed position which involves the synthesis of their own and their colleagues’ practice experience; and emphasises the professional nature of their judgements and those of colleagues they respected.
The perspective required to critically reflect and resist practice mandate is lacking in junior workers who have been brought in recently, and who enact, in word and action, the letter of “the contract”.  They explain to their clients this is what they are required to do by the contract, using the words and language of the contract because they lack referent beyond this.
Cultural capital in the form of their professional qualifications enable Sarah and Jo, or as in the case of Barbara 11 years practice experience, to reflect critically on the practices required in their workplace, and resist these when there is conflict with their preferences.  Cultural capital enables them to engage in strategies which may utlimately result in them needing to leave the employer, yet with the option of finding work elsewhere.
Some of the workers don’t have so many options because they don’t have formal qualifications, and even if she did her location makes it harder to get a job at the right pay level that will enable her to live comfortably. This is an example where the cultural capital obtained through qualifications or strong and long history and performance in a job is not enough because of the constraints on economic capital which exist in the form of a weak labour market. Once again these stories illustrate how possession of capital is dependent on it having a practical use which is dependent on a range of external factors, some of them structural as in the case of the labour market.
xxxxxxxx
In the stories of welfare recipients I have identified a strong element of subjective recognition as a mediating factor in treatments by workers.  There is often conflict between their own subjective apprehension of the needs of clients, and the treatments they are required to implement.  Furthermore, they are required to treat them all as job seekers where the primary focus is employability (Peck and Theodore 2000).
This label of job seeker enables workers to distance themselves from clients with whom they don’t readily identify, and give preferential treatment to those they do. For example, Jo identifies the way in which subjective bias enters workers judgements, especially those without qualifications, treatments of job seekers.
Where there others in the office who had more of a PR compliance focus than you?
There were a couple who had been on reception or in admin, they were very much like the training package that we were given by DEEEWR, was very much A+B=C and you follow this process and la de da de da, they just booked their appointments, tried to call them once, and there was this whole thing of ring ring. Oh it rang twice and they didn’t answer,
They had ones they like and ones they didn’t? What were those differences based on?
Oh people they could identify more with
OK, so it was a subjective identification of some people more than others?
Oh absolutely, like one of the girls was from x herself, so anyone who was kind of Anglo, young, same sort of lifestyle, couple of kids, they were her favourites…So if there was some old Arab guy on payments for 5 years, she was very hard line, and you could because it’s all under the guidelines.
The most wasteful activity the workers agree is job search clubs. Jo says, and she notes how they are used selectively to punish certain types of job seekers the workers don’t identify with.
Yeah you know we’ll show him, we’ll teach him, this one’s lazy therefore we’ll put him in job club so he’ll have to come twice a week for four hours a week, chuck him in the computer room in front of a computer, get him to flick through newspapers that’ll motivate him, that’ll put the fire up him (sarcastic). And that’s what, they were panicking we weren’t getting outcomes so the more the higher ups were going arghh you’re not getting your outcomes, the more hard core we were being encouraged to be.  When I started it was all kind of flowers and sweetness, yeah give people what they need and help them, help them, then within 6 months it had gone to we’re not getting the outcomes we need to start pushing people into job clubs which are the biggest waste of time. We need to bore people and waste their time until they decide a job is better. That’s it basically.
The two week intensive activity, compliance activity, was about boring people?
Yep.
Jo notices how this validation of their roles could be used as a power trip for those who have not had power before, and who once they have been granted this power in their (quasi) professional life, mete it out in questionable doses.  Worker recognition appears to be closely associated with the degree to which workers experience empowerment as a result of the conditions they are required to impose on job seekers, with Jo describing workers who positively seemed to relish the new forms of power they have obtained in their jobs, particularly punitive powers for people from “other” backgrounds.
Jo reflects on how some colleagues appear to thrive on the new form of institutional power that comes into their possession.
It’s a power trip for someone who has not had the kind of power before, to go well here you go love you’re now a professional person, and no reflection, no. You’ve worked in admin, you know  the system. Do the training package off you go.
So that power trip was about them having authority to make significant decisions relating to other people’s lives
In contrast, Sarah’s practice illustrates the ways in which discriminate use of institutional power can be used to effectively engage welfare recipients in negotiating their outcomes.
Yes so that’s my personal belief, and that’s why I was quite happy to explain your responsibility, so that’s OK you don’t have to do what we say but these are the consequences I don’t 100 per cent agree with it, but this is the way it is, if you want to change but you can’t change overnight so either you are going to be bothered by my letters, my contact, or Centrelink, or we can work together, if you explain this to them like this, you have to pick the right time, they usually prepared to negotiate.
So you reach a position of negotiation?
Sarah was able to articulate that this process involves the exercise of institutional power, and how this was appropriate to use when compliance was needed.
Yes so I have to utlize a bit of authority that I have, and I know some workers weren’t very comfortable using these power strategies, but personally I am comfortable because the world is not that fair all the time. You know everyone has ups and downs in life, maybe you are not very happy and angry, and I am here to help you to maybe ease the pain, or maybe help you get what you want. So if you give them a choice, the feel like they have options, that eradicate a bit of anxiety, this was when I was able to have a meaningful discussion with them.
Yes its realty interesting so it sound like that you are able to take control?
Yes
But then you give them some power back for them to have some choices, so then when you negotiate what the person wants to do now between certain pathways, is that the  beginning of the development of trust between you?
Yes, absolutely so and I always believe in peoples strengths and strengths in their networks. (Sarah)
The subtlety of Sarah’s approach involves the application of measured forms of capital to the welfare exchange.  She applies institutional authority in the right measure that is needed to get the job seeker’s engagement.  She then transitions the exchange to a more balanced domain of negotiation as the basis on which to build the job seekers trust. It is a model of handling the transaction that requires great skill to pull off.
Such a delicate balancing act can only be achieved when the conditions dictating the terms of the exchange are set to accommodate this.  It also involves workers being in possession of the freedom, capacity and willingness to engage with job seekers of all types without prejudice. Workers without the capacity to use their power discriminately succeed only in increasing job seeker disengagement. While the uncoupling of hassle from help would alleviate this, to achieve any real and effective change to employment services, the example provides a model on which such transactions can proceed in a way that engages job seekers by empowering them as parties to their own future.  This empowerment is based on recognition of their needs and interests.
Sarah spoke of her attempts to influence the practice of colleagues she found ill-equipped to handle the complexity of her clients. Peer to peer education in which colleagues “struggle” to inform the work place with classifications that align with their interests can only be successful relative to the degree to which there is tolerance for these values; and as reform of employment services for JSA resulted in changed classifications for job seekers with the most complex barriers who had previously been quarantined from employment focused employment assistance in the Personal Support Program (PSP).
xxx
This section has explored the ways in which capital hold value that is relative to the context in which it is exercised. If it is recognised and legitimated as having value its value reflects it value relative to that context.  The context (or field) provides the variable for the value of capital as prescribed by the rules governing the context; and that the value of capital is mediated through the subjective values of workers. Workers make decisions which reflect their values to the extent they perceive the rules governing their conduct permit this.
The rules employment services workers enforce are based on assumptions of work avoidance which reinforce the low symbolic value of job seeker social position. The ways in which this weighting is played out in the dynamic inter-subjective relations between workers and clients illustrates how the conflict between interests between agents and authorities is constructed in a two-way exchange of views between workers and clients.
This conclusion leads to a discussion on the way rule surveillance is enforced in employment services and the impact this has on welfare exchanges in this context.

Part 2 Surveillance and workers

The need to be successful as an employment services agency drives highly competitive cultures s where targets are set for workers.  Agencies compete with each other for star ratings, and at an agency level adopt strategies to shed “unviable” caseload. Strategies noted by the workers to shift dead weight case load, to cherry pick and park clients have all been noted by researchers elsewhere. Neville (Neville and Lohan 2011) for example identified an inevitable tendency towards gaming behaviour, strategies that are pursued at the agency level to improve competitiveness.
In fact terms like “deadweight” caseload are quoted by both workers and DEEWR shows the symbolic complicity between contracting  and contracted agency.  This complicity speaks of the contradictions inherent in the system which is supposed to respond to the needs of individuals, but which in reality the priority is a race to get as many people into jobs regardless of the individual’s preferences and the long term viability of the job.
A feature of neoliberalism has been the drive towards new punitiveness (Garrett 2013Pratt, Brown et al. 2013) as phenomenon that is most evident in the increasing levels of incarceration in the West, especially North America.  New punitiveness is also characterised by new forms of incarceration or punishment, reversing the shift in welfare state/penal modernity (p.xv) towards practices that are less commensurate with the nature of the offence.
The deprivation of welfare to stretches of 8 week non-payment periods is one form of these practices in relation to job seekers.  Although the penalty is only imposed in conditions of persistent non-compliance (or for leaving a job without a reasonable excuse), it jeopardises welfare through the withdrawal of payment for periods which result in homelessness and the escalation of debt.
Some have already argued that neoliberal governmentalisation is enacted through prescribing the actions of agents (eg (McDonald and Marston 2005Dean 2009) .  Agents in the form of workers at the front line are the delivery of the responsibilising project, where their activities are as much subject to surveillance as those of their clients (Peck and Theodore 2000Peck and Theodore 2000Peck 2001).
The requirement for employment services to “service” individuals from these new categories is subject to surveillance through departmental monitoring of KPIs and “quality”. The surveillance burden is onerous, and providers who fail to perform at the right levels lose their contracts. Contract compliance in its various forms including star rating performance has become such a significant driver of provider behaviour it has overtaken service standards as the single most preoccupation of the sector.
The behaviour of employment services workers is also subject to hard rules they must follow, and reinforced through monitoring and surveillance which leaves them challenged to exercise discretion in most contexts. The primary form of surveillance to which employment service workers are subject is KPIs and target based rewards systems. Through these mechanism employers are able to check their staffs’ performance and drive them towards targets in a relentless drive to push performance ever upwards.
The surveillance of compliance is felt keenly by workers as requirements to lift standards and achieve which outcomes, dominates their exchanges with job seekers. The impact of this phenomenon has been reported in forms relating to indicators in the capacity to exercise discretion, stress, morale and the quality of the working alliance (refs).

Recognition; misrecognition and symbolic violence

Workers experienced the impact of changes to employment services system rules that eventually effected change to the workplace culture.  In some cases workers from old Job Network providers were brought in to actively change the ethos of the workplace, a feat which they eventually achieved.
For Sarah this meant she experienced change in external conditions that imposed changes in the way she her practice could be tolerated. As the shift in classifications resulted in these changes Sarah found herself becoming more misrecognised as time passed.
Sarah herself experienced the erosion of recognition of her professional background, and how this put her out sync with the demands of her employers and colleagues.  She describes her experiences of this transitional phase with great sadness as if she found it difficult to accept the redundancy of her professional skills and insight. She continued with the employer making a stand against the new culture with shows of resistance involving not buying into a new rewards system, for example.
It was not an explicit conflict with her employer but as she spoke on this subject she became more hesitant and troubled, as if she had experienced personal pain as the professional qualities she had practised came to be less valued and validated in the workplace context.  It is possible here to see how misrecognition affects workers in practice in workplaces in which the qualifications and skills required to perform the job are phased out.
The workers also observed that workers from agencies which failed to win the new JSA contract were dogged by an air of dejection because the failure of their employers to win the contracts was internalised as internal failure.  The workers who had colleagues who joined their teams from “failed” agencies; one who Jo emphathised with because she could see how she had internalised “failure”. 
Even workers who are new to the system do not always agree with what they are required to do, especially in the case of clients with complex needs. Mel for example, who did not wanted some of the PRs she had to submit to be overturned, but which weren’t.
Workers become conflicted about their roles. They need to be loyal to their employer and the culture and standards of the place the work for, reflecting the need to belong and have justification for their actions. It creates ambivalence however, for example for Mel who reports having how completely unrealistic her KPIs are, how unreasonable it is for them to be set that high, and how bad it feels to be an employee who misses out on the bonus of the reward system because on this.  Her way of opting out was to look for another job, until she found out by chance her work is actually quite appreciated.
Sarah, a qualified psychologist, also noticed a tendency to vilify some job seekers that involves an interesting form of disassociation worth exploring in detail. The disassociation relates to their need for professional recognition and validation of what workers are doing, therefore their inability to help some job seekers is transferred back on to clients in the form of blame.
It’s a horrible name, but I have to say, a lot of workers are experiencing a very difficult situation which they didn’t have the skill to deal with, it could be a quite traumatic situation, of course the defence mechanism, so this way of being critical, of looking down at job seekers, is a way to manage their stress I think,  I’m not justifying their behaviour but I can see where there horribleness is coming from
Basically they’re protecting themselves too, from being hurt, being traumatized or affected by, I think they externalise it in a way that they don’t get hurt, they put it down
Is that because they feel inadequate to the task
Yes I think so, they have given up on them, but they don’t say that their not allowed to, they make clients the problem, I am not the one who can’t deal with them, it’s the clients problems, so that shift somehow helps them to cope better.
Because for workers,  I am here to help this client get this job, it’s a kind of hope or kind of desire or motivation, it takes effect, it takes your energy,
Sounds like you have to be in a positive energy space to do it
Yes to hold it, but when you’ve lost that power or motivation or ability to carry, then you need to have some sort of justification, which becomes the clients because of their difficulty, not your inability (Sarah)
This phenomenon is salient because it indicates a great tension in the ways in which workers (quasi or fully professional) need to subjectively validate and reinforce recognition for the work they are doing.  It is not only job seekers who need recognition, it is workers, who find it difficult to cope if they do not feel empowered in their roles; and have terms in which they can justify their practice. This domination plays out for workers as the symbolic violence of misrecognition, in the frustrations they feel at having to impose rules, order and performance they are powerless to change.
In the view of these workers the construction of unemployment which informs employment services is wrong.  It is not only damaging because it involves the misrecognition of individual clients, it is wrong because it denotes a mindset that is adopted by workers which provides them with typecast perspectives on their clients which they lack the professional insight to critique.  Misrecognition is being generated through the reproduction of the stereotype of laziness or indolence, a view the current employment services system reproduces through its emphasis on compliance and high volume outcomes.

Par 3 Centrelink tensions

The conflict between hassle and help can be expressed as a conflict over contradictory classifications which produce different system rules, a conflict that is most readily identifiable when illustrated through the contrast in ES and Centrelink practice. The construction of welfare recipients as errant informs employment services rules, while a rights-based view of social security inform Centrelink rules.
The orthodoxy regarding street level bureaucrats and discretion is that it is mediated by the cultural situatedness of workers, and their perceptions and attitudes towards the deservingness of their clients (see for example {} . (Maynard-Moody and Musheno 2003)
Research into the employment service street level workers has shown that this discretion has been progressively eroded as system rules have become more and more detailed and proscriptive, to the extent this is now a major concern within the employment services sector (see for example (Ziguras, Considine et al. 2003Ziguras 2004McDonald and Marston 2005Nevile 2008Considine, Lewis et al. 2011).
However employment service workers continue have some discretion over some areas of their work. They have the option of lodging a contact report instead of a participation report and it is up to the judgement of the worker whether they believe the job seeker has a reasonable excuse. This permits a significant degree of discretion to operate in this exchange which has been left deliberately open for the workers to exercise judgement about “validity” of excuses, and to assess avoidance type behaviour.
The perception of service users that discretion in relation to participation failures is inappropriate suggests they hold concerns that individual bias enters into the equation, a view mentioned by Kelly in particular.
Well I was on the phone for an hour and a half, thinking my payment’s suspended, I’ve got no money to pay rent, or feed my daughter, this is all through one decision from this one lady who quite honestly does not like me. How can one person have so much power? I was really stressed. I was shaking in my body, for a moment
For Kelly there was a clear difference between the way in which workers were required to administer system rules by following scripts at Centrelink to the experience with her employment service consultant. The view from the participants can be explained by the shift in control from the safety of a knowable and documented system, to decisions based on worker assessment of the validity of activity or excuses.  If as was this case in Kelly’s experience, the worker gets it wrong, there is an immediate loss of trust and feeling of being unsafe.
This situation is not helped about the high level of contestability over the definition of “reasonable excuse” regarding a participation failure where the research participants believed the subjective interpretations of their workers were also weighted towards the assumption of work avoidance which because, in many cases, this is what is required by their employers.  The participants gained this view about the assumption because of the ways in which they observe themselves having become to be constituted as job seekers and welfare dependents.
Participation failures are subject to investigations by Centrelink personnel who pursue a script to evaluate whether the job seeker had an excuse for non-participation which consists of a long list of possible variables relating to the individual’s personal circumstances.  During this process job seekers disclose information to Centrelink staff they may not have to their employment service agency, or which they did disclose but found it was dismissed as unsatisfactory.
Centrelink impose a high rate of overturn of employment services decisions based on this information which indicates a more “disinterested” process of investigation that is not weighted so highly on the assumption of work avoidance, but of social security law and entitlement. 
Workers report rule playing by job seekers who go back and forth between their employment service and Centrelink, playing the system to get the most out of it. All workers identified a small minority of job seekers who are expert at deceiving Centrelink, and who also use the fact there is a weak labour market to get away with being unemployed.
Querying the rules has the effect of creating conflict in service encounters, a problem widely reported by the participants who have found a high level of defensiveness in both Centrelink and Employment service provider behaviour as a result.  This defensiveness is a result of the requirement for these workers to implement rules according to strict guidelines and therefore to guard the interests of the authorities they represent.   As their application of the rules was under scrutiny it is understandable they should occupy a position in which their actions stand up to external examination.
There is an inherent tension here between whose interests workers serve which reflects the way in which employment service design is weighted towards assuming there are high levels of work avoidance amongst job seekers, as opposed to being weighted towards being there to support their needs.
This area of discrepant interpretations of the two agencies is the area of ongoing negotiation and investigation by the agency authorities because of the ways in which conflict is escalated from the employment services agencies to Centrelink causing the latter to shoulder a high workload of investigations.  Based on this analysis however, it is unlikely they will resolve these discrepancies until their workers are basing their judgements from rules informed by the same interests.
The idea that employment services and Centrelink interest are misaligned explains a good deal of the system noise in transactions that occur between the agencies.  This system noise is based on a mutual incomprehension of the respective parties’ roles. It is reflected in institutional rules, cultures and the behaviour of workers who are literally singing from a different hymn sheet because of the different welfare constructions informing their institutional practices.
This area of discrepant interpretations of the two agencies is the area of ongoing negotiation and investigation by the agency authorities because of the ways in which conflict is escalated from the employment services agencies to Centrelink causing the latter to shoulder a high workload of investigations.  Based on this analysis however, it is unlikely they will resolve these discrepancies until their workers are basing their judgements from rules informed by the same interests.
Jo’s case study illustrates the critical differences between the interests of employment services and Centrelink respectively represent.  Jo had the opportunity to observe this from the perspective of a Centrelink worker undertaking Comprehensive Compliance reviews of the clients. Their priority was to restore their clients on the system and investigate the complex reasons for non-compliance.  Jo says more often than not they could find reasons, “to get them back on the system”.

 
She notes her work on the compliance team involved “getting people back on to the system” in contrast to employment services whose interests are disciplinary and involving activities that have been designed purely as forms of punishments.
An interesting attribute of her clients here is their emotional “flatness”. It is that mood of weariness and resignation, of their being nothing much the client can do about the situation, of disempowerment, as they are subject to yet another process, that although in this case involves the restoration of withheld payments, does not “re-engage” them with the system.  In fact, the routines of compliance and punishment, have created the disengagement that once they are back at the employment services who reported them, is expressed in antagonistic terms and in conflict with workers.
While at Centrelink they submit to a process that is necessary to restore their payments, the process does not help them to address the complex issues that contribute to their welfare dependence. Receipt of payment is a necessity for subsistence, not something that is immediately acknowledged as demanding reciprocity or mutual obligation.  Job seekers know they have obligations and articulate these as mandated norms to which they in most part agree; they articulate them as obligations that are reciprocal in terms of their need for recognition of their interests.
All workers emphasised the complexity of the needs of the clients who were in the most trouble with the system.  For job seekers in crisis, the capacity to identify these interests is overwhelmed by the need to stabilise their personal circumstances, stabilisation that can take many years of effort to achieve.  Without this stabilisation, there cannot be any progress towards building on their strengths, a professional approach which helps clients identify and articulate interests.
Despite the best efforts of workers who bend the rules and go to extraordinary lengths to assist their clients, some of whom lack awareness of their own mental health conditions, the “merry go round” as some call it, to go around and knock them off and force them back on in relentless and counterproductive cycles that serve only to entrench their disengagement and lost self-efficacy. 

Misrecognition of the problem

The sense that things have become so much harder during JSA was reinforced by Barbara who in her eleven years of experience in the system, has never seen it so bad.
The conclusion of this analysis is the same as that for the analysis of job seeker stories. That is that policy settings for employment services misrecognise the needs clients and obliges workers to administer treatments which are counterproductive to engagement. They also leave workers frustrated and with a conflicted sense of identity about their roles. Hassle and help do not work well together, except in a very small number of cases where enforced social contact is a catalyst to behavioural change for those who are socially isolated.
Similarly to the clients interviewed for this research, worker indignation is strongest for those who have they most highly articulated sense of professional and personal interests. Sarah experienced domination in the workplace that left her personally upset. Jo describes hating what she was in employment services, because it was so at odds with her professional standards as a social worker.
The theoretical conclusion of this analysis is that resistance is a relational property of the way capital is “recognised” and mediated institutionally (according to rules) or symbolically (according to values).  Workers are more likely to resist requirements imposed on them if their values do not align with the rules of their service or the values of their employers, and there is capacity within the rules for them to do so.

 

 
References

 


  

No comments:

Post a Comment

Hi there, comments on this blog are moderated, don't let it put you off just make sure they are appropriate. Thanks!