Version 1st Edition

Creating Citizen-Consumers: Changing Relationships and Identifications, 2003-2005

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Clarke, J.

Description

This project was situated in a number of significant political, policy and academic debates. Citizens and consumers are typically thought of as antagonistic terms, reflecting the institutional oppositions between state and market, public and private, collectivism and individualism. As a result, addressing citizens as consumers of public services implies a shift from the collectivist and state-centric formations of post-war welfarism to the individualist and market-centric formations associated with neo-liberalism. Although it derives from the Conservative governments of the 1980s and 1990s, Labour governments since 1997 have placed the citizen-consumer in a central role in the modernisation and reform of public services in the UK. A model of consumer choice has increasingly been identified as the means of empowering the citizen-consumer. <br> <br> The project centred on two key propositions. Firstly, policies on consumerism and choice are likely to produce shifting relationships between the providers and users of public services, but these may be service-specific. Secondly, the figure of the citizen-consumer may not capture the complexity of service user identifications. Also, the project had four main objectives: to trace the development of consumerist relationships in British social policy; to explore the forms such relationships take in different services, sectors and political cultures; to examine how consumer identities articulate with other identities among service users and service providers; and to situate the shift to consumerist relationships in social policy in the UK in an international context.<br> <br> Further information about the project and links to publications may be found on the <a href="http://www.open.ac.uk/socialsciences/creating-citizen-consumers/summary.php" title="Creating Citizen-Consumers: Changing Relationships and Identifications">Creating CitizenConsumers: Changing Relationships and Identifications</a> project web pages.<br>

Citations (2)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

1.5

FAIR Score

31%

Citations

2

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

UK Data Service

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Political Science and International Relations

Field

Social Sciences

Domain

Social Sciences

Confidence Score

43%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Normalization Factors

FT

46.15

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00