ABSTRACT

First published in 1998, this volume has been a significant contribution to current debates over the future of the public services. Professionalism has been and is a major feature of the British welfare state. Yet the political, social and economic context in which the profession emerged and flourished is changing rapidly. The professional ideal of disinterested expertise serving the public interest has lost much of its original gloss. Professional status and careers are threatened by major shifts in the structure of the welfare state which can be summed up as the decline of the big government bureaucratic model. Professions themselves face challenges to their special claims to expertise and public service from: politicians, senior managers, new social movements and pressure groups, technological change and not least from those citizens whom they aspire to serve. This volume asks how these new challenges are changing professions and how professionals themselves are adapting.

chapter 2|20 pages

Medicine

chapter 3|18 pages

Nursing

chapter 5|15 pages

Planning

chapter 6|17 pages

Social services

chapter 7|21 pages

Social housing management

chapter 8|17 pages

Environmental health

chapter 9|16 pages

School teaching

chapter 10|21 pages

Higher education

chapter 11|18 pages

The police service

chapter 12|17 pages

Justice in the lower courts

chapter 13|9 pages

Conclusion