ABSTRACT

Responsibility and professionalism are increasingly issues of concern for professional associations, employers and educators alike. When bad things happen, professionals are often held personally accountable for complex situations. Professional Responsibility and Professionalism advances our approaches to professional responsibility from individual-centred, virtue-based prescriptions towards understanding and responding effectively to the multifaceted challenges encountered today by professionals working in dynamic complexity. The author applies a sociomaterial examination to specific examples drawn from different professional contexts of practice. She examines important implications for what professional responsibility and accountability might mean individually and collectively, and what it might be becoming when demands increasingly conflict, and when we accept that capacities for action are performed into existence in emergent and precarious webs of both human and non-human forces.

The chapters explore some of the most prominent questions in professional responsibility, including:

  • What does professional responsibility, and accountability, mean in the escalating complexities and conflicts confronting today’s professionals?
  • How does professional responsibility become developed and enacted, and through what social and material entanglements?
  • How should responsibility be determined in multi-agency and interprofessional practice?
  • What happens when professional decisions are delegated to software algorithms and diagnostic instruments?
  • How are new governing regimes of professional work, such as innovation imperatives, excessive audit and logics of blame and scapegoating, reconfiguring responsibility?
  • How can professionals respond simultaneously to individuals in need, the obligations of their profession, the demands of their employer and an anxious society?

A major concern addressed by each chapter, and the book as a whole, is educating professionals in and for responsibility. Specific dilemmas and strategies are offered for educators in universities, workplaces and professional development contexts who seek new approaches to helping professionals learn to critically understand and practise responsibility today.

This book will appeal to a wide audience of education researchers and post-graduate students studying professional practice, professionalism and education across a wide range of disciplines. Health professionals, professionals working in private practices, such as law, architecture and engineering, newer professions such as social work and policing, and educational professionals at all levels will find stories and strategies reflecting key issues of their practice in this detailed exploration of professional responsibility and accountability.

chapter 1|20 pages

Changing conceptions of professional responsibility

A sociomaterial view

chapter 2|18 pages

The ‘good' professional

Professionalism as governance

chapter 3|17 pages

Measure for measure

Expanding regimes of assessment

chapter 4|16 pages

When bad things happen

Risk and blame in professional responsibility

chapter 5|21 pages

Wanted

The innovative professional

chapter 6|19 pages

Citizen professionals?

Social and ecological responsibility

chapter 8|19 pages

Post-professionalism?

New regimes of big data and digital code

chapter 9|16 pages

Risky business

Social media and professionalism