This book explores two public sector scandals in the UK, drawing on Max Weber’s thought on ‘the iron cage’ to understand how these cases of patient-neglect in NHS hospitals and failures by police and social workers to address the organised sexual exploitation of young girls occurred.
Through examination of the management failures and institutional vulnerabilities, and with attention to the trends of bureaucratisation and rationalisation that characterised both scandals, it reveals the explanatory power of Weber’s thought, developing a theoretical model that updates and extends Weber’s work in light of the cases discussed. The final chapter examines the response to the COVID-19 pandemic and highlights how the focus on a rational techno-medical solution to the pandemic offered by the vaccines together with bureaucratic expansion has created an authoritarian and totalitarian society which represents the ultimate realisation of Weber’s iron cage.
Showing that ordinary people, including professionals, are still trapped in the ‘iron cage’, it will appeal to scholars of sociology and social theory, as well as those providing training and working within the caring and service professions of policing, social work and nursing.
Author(s): Rowena Slope
Series: Classical and Contemporary Social Theory
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 181
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
List of Tables
Introduction
1. Life, Times and Works of Max Weber (1864–1920)
2. Relevant Applications of Max Weber’s Work
3. New Managerialism at Mid Staffordshire and Rotherham
4. Professional Indoctrination
5. Regulatory Compromise
6. Acts of Violence
7. Human Fragility
8. Sensory Deprivation
9. Going Forward
10. Conclusion
COVID-19 Afterword
References
Bibliography
Index