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Thursday, 19 November 2009 10:17 |
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By Luke Buckmaster, Matthew Thomas for the Parliament of Australia - Social Policy Section.
Since taking office in December 2007, the Rudd Government has
made social inclusion a key theme in its approach to social policy. In this research paper (Social inclusion and social citizenship towards a truly inclusive society) the authors examine the concept of social inclusion in order to
determine its usefulness as a framework for social policy. It it, they make the following points:
- The concept of social inclusion lacks a
clear definition and coherent theoretical core.
- The term social inclusion is conceptually problematic in that it
limits its scope to threshold issues and presents those being included
as passive objects of policy, rather than as active participants in society.
- The concept of social inclusion is thus unlikely to provide a
useful framework for driving social policy, without some modification or
clarification
- With its emphasis on participation, social inclusion bears some
resemblance to the concept of social citizenship, though without the crucial
focus on such participation as being a right—as is the case with citizenship.
- Locating social inclusion within a revised and more
contemporary citizenship framework would most likely strengthen it as a
concept. It would do so by reframing the concept in terms of the various
rights and duties necessary for full citizenship, and creating a more active
and participatory approach to social arrangements than can currently be found
in the concept of social inclusion.
Read the full paper at http://is.gd/4YnN4. |