Theorising Risk Work: Analysing Professionals’ Lifeworlds and Practices

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2018
Journal Professions and Professionalism
Article number e1988
Volume | Issue number 8 | 1
Number of pages 18
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
The proliferation of risk logics within public and private sector organisational contexts where many professionals work has been studied as a phenomenon itself, as governance and in its impact on clients. The everyday experiences and practices of (para)professionals where risk has become a key and in some cases (re)defining feature or logic of everyday work—in assessing, intervening, advising and/or communicating—has received much less attention. We develop a theoretical framework for analysing this risk work, identifying three core and interwoven features—risk knowledge, interventions, and social relations. Central to our argument is that these features often stand in tension with one another, as intrinsic and implicit features of risk knowledge—probabilities, categories and values—become explicit and awkward in everyday practices and interactions. We explore key analytical trajectories suggested by our theoretical framework—in particular, the ways in which tensions emerge, remain (partially) hidden or are reconciled in practice.
Document type Article
Note Special Issue: Complexity, Routines, and Reflexivity in Professional Work
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.7577/pp.1988
Downloads
1988-Article Text-9118-1-10-20180321 (Final published version)
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