Competitive nationalism: state, class, and the forms of capital in devolved Scotland
Devolved government in Scotland actively reconstitutes the unequal conditions of social class reproduction. Recognition of state-led class reconstitution draws upon the social theory of Bourdieu. Our analysis of social class in devolved Scotland revisits theories that examine the state as a ‘power container’. A range of state-enabling powers regulate the legal, economic, social, and cultural containers of class relations as specific forms of what Bourdieu called economic, social, and cultural ‘capital’. The preconditions of class reproduction are structured in direct ways by the Scottish state as a wealth container but also, more indirectly, as a cultural container and a social container. Competitive nationalism in the devolved Scottish state enacts neoliberal policies as a class-specific worldview but, at the same time, discursively frames society as a panclass national fraternity in terms of distinctive Scottish values of welfare nationalism. Nationalism is able to express this ambiguity in symbolic ways in which the partisan language of social class cannot.
Year of publication: |
2012
|
---|---|
Authors: | Law, Alex ; Mooney, Gerry |
Published in: |
Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy. - Pion Ltd, London, ISSN 1472-3425. - Vol. 30.2012, 1, p. 62-77
|
Publisher: |
Pion Ltd, London |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
New Labour/hard labour? : restructuring and resistance inside the welfare industry
Mooney, Gerry, (2007)
-
Key concepts in classical social theory
Law, Alex, (2011)
-
Explaining poverty, social exclusion and inequality : towards a structural approach
Mooney, Gerry, (2008)
- More ...