We’re
all ambivalent about “the State”….We slag it off with pejorative terms…and
often profess to anarchistic and libertarian tendencies….In my formative period
in the early 70s I was very taken with the concept of The Local State whose
corporatist tentacles we saw strangling everything in Scotland. Cynthia
Cockburn’s 1977 book on the subject and the products of the national CDP Project were the most
powerful expression of this critique – although Newcastle sociologists such as
Jon Davies and Norman Dennis had led the way with their books of 1972.
And
yet I was an active social democrat, consciously using the levers of (local)
state power open to me to push the boundaries of opportunity for people I saw as marginalized and
disenfranchised
That
period of my life lasted from 1974-90 and is captured in From Multiple Deprivation
to Social Exclusion
Since
then, my focus has been more single-mindedly on the development of
institutional capacity in the state bodies of ex-communist countries. The World
Bank reflected the prevailing opinion of the early 90s in asserting that the
state should simply be allowed to crumble….. and only came to is senses (partly
due to Japanese pressure) with its 1997 Report – the State in a Changing
World
By
the time of my exodus from Britain, the country had already had a full decade
of Thatcher – and of privatisation. I confess that part of me felt that a bit
of a shake-up had been necessary…..but it was George Monbiot’s The Captive State (2000) – 3 years after New Labour’s stunning victory - which alerted me to the
full scale of the corporate capture of our institutions and elites regardless
of political affiliation …
And why did this capture take place? Simply because
of a set of insidious ideas about freedom which I felt as I grew up and have
seen weld itself into the almost irresistible force we now call “neoliberalism”……..But
it is a word we should be very careful of using….partly because it is not easy
to explain but mainly because it carries that implication of being beyond human
resistance….
The
sociologists talk of “reification” when our use of abstract nouns gives away such
power – abstracting us as human agents out of the picture.
Don’t Think of an Elephant – know your values and frame the debate is apparently quite a famous book published in 2004 by American psychologist George Lakoff - which gives a wonderful insight into how words and phrases can gain this sort of power – and can be used deliberately in the sorts of campaigns which are now being waged all around us…
Don’t Think of an Elephant – know your values and frame the debate is apparently quite a famous book published in 2004 by American psychologist George Lakoff - which gives a wonderful insight into how words and phrases can gain this sort of power – and can be used deliberately in the sorts of campaigns which are now being waged all around us…
Amidst
all the causes which vie for our attention, it has become clear to me that the
central one must be for the integrity of
the State – whether local or national….I know all the counter-arguments – I
am still a huge fan of community power and social enterprise. And the state’s
increasingly militaristic profile threatens to undermine what’s left of our
trust. But those profiled in “Dismembered
– how the attack on the State harms us all” are the millions who work in public
services which are our lifeblood – not just the teachers and health workers but
all the others on whom we depend, even the much maligned inspectorates - all
suffering from cutbacks, monstrous organizational upheavals and structures….
I
am amazed that more books like this one have not been forthcoming…
Coincidentally,
I have also been reading the confessions of a
few political scientists who argue that it lost its way in the 70s and, for
decades, has not been dealing with real issues. I do remember Gerry Stoker
saying this to the American professional body in 2010 and am delighted that more
have now joined him in a quest for relevance
And
I’m looking forward to the publication in a few weeks of The
Next Public Administration – debates and dilemmas; by Guy Peters (and Jon
Pierre) who is one of the best political scientists of his generation.
For
too long, “the State” has been the focus of irrelevant academic scribbling….at
last there are some stirrings of change!