Systemic Thinking and Pragmatic Philosophy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

Systemic Thinking and Pragmatic Philosophy

Description:

Systemic Thinking and Pragmatic Philosophy A New [& Necessary] Approach to Social Work? Steve J Hothersall The Robert Gordon University Aberdeen, Scotland, UK. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:79
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: Steve2045
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Systemic Thinking and Pragmatic Philosophy


1
Systemic Thinking and Pragmatic Philosophy A
New Necessary Approach to Social Work?
  • Steve J Hothersall
  • The Robert Gordon University
  • Aberdeen, Scotland, UK.
  • STEP Helsinki May 2012

This presentation was held on a conference of the
project STEP. The project STEP has been
funded with support from the European
Commission. This publication communication
reflects the views only of the author, and the
Commission cannot be held responsible for any use
which may be made of the information contained
therein.
2
The Issues
  • Welfare and well-being (eudemonia) should be the
    focus of social work practice. Policy systems
    ought to be facilitative of this.
  • We are however increasingly dedicated to
    perceiving the smaller picture rather than the
    larger one. This is one manifestation of
    neo-liberal individualism.
  • We can use systemic principles to understand what
    policy systems are doing, but also to appreciate
    what they are not doing.
  • Rules of and for action ought to be revised based
    on the lessons from experience and the results of
    reasoning rationality is bounded.
  • This leads us to consider the relevance of
    pragmatism as a mechanism for increasing our
    knowledge

3
Pragmatism as an organizing conceptual framework
  • P. has as its concern the implications of
    purposive action
  • P. as a means of studying the acquisition of
    knowledge and its use (action)
  • Everyday life as something in the making
  • P. concerned with the emergent, processual
    interconstituted relationship between knowing and
    doing which occurs as people engage with, and in,
    the world around them
  • Human knowing as intimately connected to human
    doing (c/f Vygotsky)

4
Pierces Pragmatic Principle
  • A person will be justified in accepting
    proposition P as being true if
  • at the time, there is nothing to confirm or
    disconfirm the acceptance of P as such and
  • there is a real possibility that by accepting P
    as true (or very likely to be so), it is likely
    to enhance cognitive or moral utility more than
    if P was not accepted.
  • Pragmatic Principle heuristic device

5
  • Any welfare system should include a systemic
    concern with all aspects of social need health,
    education, housing, income maintenance, etc
  • But, a welfare system does not in fact appear
    to exist. If there is one, there is little
    interconnectedness between the parts.
  • Rather, we have various separate welfare-related
    strands that do not connect seamlessly. Current
    reforms of the social care and health landscape
    in the UK are testimony to the lack of systemic
    thinking regarding welfare/well-being.
  • The search for profit and financial efficiency
    dominate the welfare agenda.
  • Welfare reform gt decrease spending good!
  • Unintended consequences often go unnoticed as
    feedback mechanisms at the policy level are
    dinosauric
  • Welfare reform increased need forced access
    to other systems systemically, the issues are
    at best recycled and at worst compounded
    because people are forced out of the loop

6
  • Is social work, by virtue of its espoused value
    system and its location within particular
    organisational frameworks, doomed to expose
    itself to all external influences but then forced
    to control its responses because of unmanageable
    anxieties entering the system?
  • Ashbys Law of Requisite Variety
  • Minimum number of choices to resolve
    uncertainties

7
  • Social work and its systems are low-down on the
    welfare hierarchy and have tended to be dominated
    latterly by compulsion, compliance and
    managerialist conceptions of need.
  • From a systemic perspective, the basic elements
    of any system may change without much impact on
    the system per se. However, if there is poor
    interconnectedness between the different
    sub-systems and an ill-defined purpose, the
    system will collapse or entropy.
  • Ashby Law of Requisite Variety
  • We have seen this in relation to child care and
    protection in the UK, recently highlighted by the
    death of Baby P.

8
A Pragmatic Solution?
  • The development of a systemic toolkit that
    encourages the conscious application of core
    systemic principles into policy consultation,
    design, delivery, implementation and evaluation.
  • Utilizing core systemic principles and tools to
    assist in mapping the extent to which policy
    intentions equate with addressing social need
  • Organisational structures
  • Technology procedures
  • Organisational/professional cultures
  • Strategic plans/approaches
  • Leadership strategies
  • Lipsky Street-Level Bureaucrats a study of
    pragmatism in policy implementation

9
  • Practitioners are the key players in relation to
    policy effectiveness, not policy-makers.
  • There is a need for a broad-base of systemic
    thinkers within the practice domain who, in
    collaboration with systemically-oriented
    policy-makers and politicians can begin to map
    the welfare policy terrain much more effectively.
  • Pragmatism can facilitate our understanding of
    the possible emergent policy outcomes based on
    the acceptance of Pierces Pragmatic Maxim by
    approaching it this way, it appears more likely
    that it will work as we go along, we will
    change it if we need to. Ideologies have a role.
  • Inductive approach to knowledge creation
    regarding policy.
  • Pragmatism argues that theory and practice are
    not separate and distinct entities rather, that
    theory is but an abstraction from direct
    experience/practice and ultimately must return to
    inform this

10
  • Reductionism
  • Myopia
  • Expediency suitable at the time, but not
    necessarily just or right
  • Pragmatic properly conceived ethical
  • Unintended consequences
  • The natural ecology of human need gt welfare
    systems gt profit gt outputs gt autopoietic focus

11
Pragmatism as an organizing conceptual framework
  • Dewey Logical forms accrue to subject matter
    when the latter is subjected to controlled
    inquiry.
  • The findings of inquiry remain indeterminate in
    that they are open to reinterpretation on the
    basis of further inquiry, ad nauseum.
  • The determination of a genuine problem is
    progressive
  • The observation of facts' (perceptions) and
    their suggested meanings (conceptions) arise and
    develop in correspondence with each other.
  • Perception gtgtgtgt?ltltltltConception
  • Perceptual conceptual materials are instituted
    in functional correlativity with each other
    (p326)
  • ? function
  • Pragmatism functionality (technician?) must
    include why?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com